Title: AMST 3100 The 1960s The Counterculture
1AMST 3100 The 1960sThe Counterculture
- Powerpoint 11
- Read Chafe Chapter 11 Farber Chapter 8
2The War at Home
- The rise of the counterculture reflected a loss
of faith in the liberal reforms promoted by John
Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson. - As faith and idealism toward liberal reforms
declined, radicalism grew among specific elements
of American society. Many of these late 1960s
radicals came from the frustrated civil rights
advocates, frustrated war protestors, college
students, Hispanic youth, feminists, gays, and
youth culture in general. - Radicals believed that the system itself was too
corrupt for the changes needed and it was time to
tear it down and rebuilt it into a more
democratic, inclusive (multicultural),
peace-oriented, and egalitarian system.
Street riot by members of the counterculture in
Berkeley, California. By the late 1960s, the
counterculture had shifted away from liberal
democratic reforms and toward radicalism.
3Blacks From Civil Rights to Black Power
- By the mid-1960s, SNCC had split apart from the
SCLC. - The SCLC remained a liberal reform movement with
the basic goal of racial assimilation. - At first, the SCLC envisioned SNCC as their own
youth group spin-off, but by 1964 SNCC did not
agree with this characterization. - SNCC, led by increasingly radicalized people like
Stokely Carmichael in 1966, began to reject the
American Dream of assimilation to advocate a more
rapid and radical change toward black
nationalism. - SNCC had become more skeptical toward the system.
It had tackled racism in the Deep South and had
seen federal agents passively watch SNCC members
be brutalized by Southern racists.
Stokeley Carmichael addresses a SNCC rally in
Florida in 1967. The theme of SNCC rallies during
this period was black power. Black power
advocates rejected the melting pot version of the
American Dream, favoring a pluralistic vision of
multi-ethnic equality. Rather than deny their
African-ness they sought to affirm it Im
black and Im proud! However, the black power
movement frightened many whites because it came
across as militant.
4Rising SNCC Radicalism
- The beginning of the split between the SCLC and
SNCC probably occurred during the famous 1963
March on Washington where King gave his I Have a
Dream speech. - John Lewis, the leader of SNCC at that time, had
written a speech that was critical of the federal
government. Lewiss script asked the question,
Which side is the federal government on? That
sentence and other critical commentary was
censored by organizers of the March to avoid
offending the JFK administration. - Lewis and others had become frustrated at the
passivity of the Kennedy administration. - Then they went through Freedom Summer and
proffered the MFDP at the 1964 Democratic
Convention, only to be insulted by a gesture of
2 token seats. Now it was LBJ who frustrated
SNCC, and SNCC stormed out. The system itself was
broken, they concluded.
John Lewis in the foreground, with King and
Andrew Young in the background. This photo was
taken during the Selma March of 1965.
5James Meredith
- SNCC would continue to see a lack of sincere
action on the part of the political system. The
problem wasnt just the Dixiecrats, they
concluded. It was the system itself, with its
entrenched backstage power brokers who were too
friendly to the status quo. - On June 5, 1966, James Meredith started a solo
march from Memphis to Jackson, Mississippi to
protest racism. His march was called the March
Against Fear. Meredith was gunned down by a
sniper soon after starting this march. - This event helped galvanize rising black
frustration at the system. Stokely Carmichael of
SNCC vowed to continue the march in Merediths
name.
When civil rights advocates like Stokeley
Carmichael heard Meredith was shot while on his
solo march, they formed a massive new march
against fear and completed Merediths march to
Jackson.
6Black Power!
- The March Against Fear continued. On June 16,
1966 Stokely Carmichael arrived with other
marchers at Greenwood, Mississippi and was
promptly arrested for trespassing when they tried
to set up camp. Here, Carmichael delivered a
speech in which he said, - "This is the twenty-seventh time I have been
arrested and I ain't going to jail no more! The
only way we gonna stop them white men from
whuppin' us is to take over. What we gonna start
sayin' now is Black Power!"
Stokeley Carmichael calls for Black Power in
1966.
7Malcolm X
- The father of the Black Power movement was
probably Malcolm X. He was a charismatic and
influential leader within the Nation of Islam who
had already become radicalized by the time of the
1963 March on Washington. - He was a strong advocate of militant
self-defense, and the FBI had been watching him
for quite a while. - While he mostly adhered to the Nation of Islam
(Black Muslim) teachings, Malcolm X also broke
from these teachings to embrace black
nationalism. - One of his ideological struggles was between
black separatism (from all other races) versus a
racially integrated black Muslim movement. He was
intelligent and ultimately learned to think for
himself and not rely on ideological dogma to do
his thinking for him. This probably cost him his
life, because he was murdered in February, 1965,
by members of the Nation of Islam for not being
true to Nation of Islam dogma.
Malcolm X, on the right, with Martin Luther King,
Jr. Both were charismatic leaders. Malcolm X
rejected the assimilation melting pot ideal that
King had seemed to champion in the early 1960s,
preferring a more pluralistic vision of America.
8Black Power!
- The Black Power movement was a rejection of the
liberal reformist assimilation ideal promoted by
Martin Luther King, Jr.. They argued that
assimilation robs black people of their own
identity and heritage. - Rather, Black Power advocates sought racial
separation in order to preserve their unique
African-American identities, which had been
robbed by the European colonialists and American
slave traders of the past. - This movement was a celebration of black
nationalism (or black identity), complete with
their own black-run institutions. They argued
that blacks had to learn to be self-sufficient
and to fight oppression on their own terms. This
included organizing community self-help groups in
the inner cities, as well as an assertion that
Black is Beautiful, a rediscovery of African
names, and a celebration of Black culture.
The Black Panthers were one of the outcomes of
the Black Power movement. Formed in 1966, they
advocated a militant defense of their right to
determine their own destiny. But the military
uniforms and open display of weapons made them a
target of J. Edgar Hoover and others who were
frightened they might start a race war.
9Black Power!
- Black power advocates also rejected the
nonviolent approach of Dr. King, favoring
violence if used for self-defense. - The peace and love thing that King advocated
was over for most Black Power advocates. It was a
time for a new militancy - to stand up and say
Im black and Im proud. - This new militancy was particularly aimed at the
police, who patrolled ghettos like Watts in Los
Angeles as though they were an occupying colonial
army. It was time to fight internal colonization. - This was not a complete rejection of nonviolence.
To black power advocates, however, nonviolence
was a strategy whereas to Martin Luther King, Jr.
it was a principle. - To Stokely Carmichael, blacks needed to unite in
solidarity, develop a class consciousness, and
become self-reliant.
10The Black Panthers
- The Black Panther Party (BPP) was formed in
October, 1966 by Huey Newton and Bobby Seale, and
was the inner city expression of the Black Power
Movement. - It was originally called the Black Panther Party
for Self-Defense, and was founded in Oakland
California. - The Party embraced the basic ideals of the black
power movement. Essentially it was an expression
of this movement by poor young blacks who were
frustrated at the failure of the War on Poverty
and other reforms of the establishment to make a
real difference in the ghetto. - The Black Panthers developed a Ten-Point program
calling for Land, Bread, Housing, Education,
Clothing, Justice And Peace, among other things.
They instituted a variety of community action
programs to alleviate poverty and gave young
black teens positive role models of disciplined,
responsible behavior.
Black Panther founders Huey Newton, on the right,
and Bobby Seale on the left. The Panthers were
targeted by the FBIs COINTELPRO
(counter-intelligence program), which engaged in
illegal activities to try to destroy the
Panthers. Bobby Seale was also one of the Chicago
Eight.
11The Black Panthers
- While Stokely Carmichael embraced Black Power,
Huey Newton and Bobby Seale embraced the Marxist
notion of power to the people! and considered
the black underclass an urban proletariat. - The Black Panthers would aid in their development
of a revolutionary class consciousness. - The Black Panthers eventually forged alliances
with Students for a Democratic Society (SDS), the
Youth International Party (YIPPIES), the Chicago
Brown Berets, and even the Gay Liberation Front. - The BPP was most active between 1966 and 1972.
In this photo the Black Panthers are in the
process of forming a coalition with the Peace and
Freedom Party in Berkeley California.
12The Black Panthers
- The Black Panthers were not very well understood
by mainstream whites, however. The corporate
media tended to emphasize their militancy
(despite the fact that it was mostly
self-defensive) and this frightened suburban
whites into fears of a race war. - Charles Manson tried to exploit this fear in his
1969 Tate-Labianca murders. These murders, like
the Altamont Festival that year, helped signal
the death of the idealistic 1960s. - The police were particularly concerned about this
new black militancy. J. Edgar Hoover and other
white authorities developed COINTELPRO, a secret
illegal counter-intelligence program intended to
infiltrate and disrupt the BPP, civil rights
organizations, and other subversive groups of
the 1960s.
Black Panther members and actor Marlon Brando
attend the funeral of Bobby Hutton, a young
Panther believed to be murdered by the police two
days after the assassination of Martin Luther
King. The Panthers were fundamentally an urban,
class-conscious proletariat that advocated black
nationalism the right of African Americans to
decide for themselves their national destiny and
to forge their own institutions.
13The Black Panthers
- The BPP opposed police brutality in the ghetto.
At that time, the police force was not yet
integrated and consisted mostly of less-educated
conservative white males, many of whom were
racists. - One of the reforms advocated by liberal reformers
was the integration of the police force. By 1972,
the police force would be integrated. - Both the Panthers and the police died in violent
confrontations that were shown on the nightly
news programs. At least 30 Black Panthers died in
such conflicts by 1970. It is likely that both
sides initiated conflict, although the Panthers
always claimed self-defense. - This was an era of black urban riots. There were
more than 130 urban riots between 1965 and 1967,
with another hundred or more following the death
of Martin Luther King in April, 1968.
BPP national headquarters office in Oakland,
California, shot out by police bullets. Fall,1968.
14The Decline of the Black Panthers
- In August, 1967, the FBI instructed COINTELPRO to
neutralize what they called black nationalist
hate groups and the BPP was targeted for
elimination. While the SCLC, SNCC, and the Nation
of Islam had also been targeted by COINTELPRO,
the Black Panthers were their primary target. - The tactics of COINTELPRO included infiltration,
misinformation, to divide and destroy leadership
as well as various wings of the movement, and
even the instigation of violence. - By 1972, thanks mostly to COINTELPRO in
combination with the internal disintegration of
the BPP, the Black Panthers were effectively
eliminated as a viable threat to the
establishment.
J. Edgar Hoover sought to eliminate the BPP
through COINTELPRO. By 1972, he had largely
succeeded.
15The Student Movement
- White students paid attention while SNCC was
morphing toward the Black Panther Party. - SNCC had become a role model organization for
white activists, too. - Like SNCC, college students were initially
idealistic about changing the world. - Students were also influenced by youth culture
themes that pitted the older generations values
against the emerging values of the youth culture. - It would be the Vietnam War along with the
restriction of free speech on college campuses
that would galvanize the emerging student
movement.
Student protest buttons from the Berkeley campus
of the University of California.
16The Port Huron Statement
- In 1962, the Students for a Democratic Society
(SDS) met in Ann Arbor, Michigan to produce a
manifesto. - The manifesto they produced was very similar to
the 1960 statements of SNCC. They were full of
hope and idealism, they advocated direct action,
and they showed faith in American institutions
for humanistic reform.
Click the image above to read the Port Huron
Statement.
17These SDS students were disturbed by many
features of American life
- The Bomb, the Cold War, militarism and
imperialism - Bureaucracy and over-rationalization
- The concentration and centralization of power in
Big Government and Big Business, and the
corresponding authoritarianism that comes with
concentration of power - Organization Man style bland careerism
- The blind conformity found on college campuses
along with in loco parentis and administrative
authoritarianism - Poverty
- The injustice of racism and the exploitation of
people and the environment by powerful
corporations and governments
18The 1962 Port Huron Statement pledged to do the
following
- To achieve universal disarmament,
demilitarization, and peace - To use diplomacy rather than militancy as the
basis of foreign policy - To work to eliminate poverty and exploitation
- To work for civil rights and to respect the
natural dignity of all humans - To revitalize American democracy
- To create communities with meaningful work and
leisure activities - To make corporations more publicly accountable
- To respect the environment
These ideas were labeled the new left and they
became part of the ideological infrastructure of
the 1960s counterculture.
19The Student Movement
- In 1962, the baby boomers were attending
universities in huge, galvanizing numbers. - A college degree was now required for many middle
class jobs. - Most students came from the growing middle class
and had come from economically secure families.
They could afford to think big. - They were aiming for something more than mere
security they were aiming for happiness and a
humane social world. - Given their affluence, these students were more
free to think critically about the shortcomings
of the consumer society.
In the colleges of the 1960s, there was a strong
liberal arts tradition. Students learned about
existentialism, classic literature, the Bill of
Rights, and other ideas that encouraged a
humanistic attitude toward life.
20The Student Movement
- Having been exposed to the civil rights movement,
the prevailing JFK-style idealism, and
humanistic ideas taught in college classrooms,
students began to push for reforms at first
within the university itself. - Some of their first concerns involved in loco
parentis authoritarianism and censorship. In
loco parentis means in place of parent and it
meant that the university had the same power over
students that their parents had, including
control over housing arrangements and other
aspects of students personal lives. - Given the popularity of the civil rights movement
in the early 1960s, white college students saw an
opportunity to take a stand. - Many had joined SNCC in the early 1960s and these
students brought back the lessons they learned
from SNCC. - Most of the former SNCC volunteers also came to
share the belief that the problem was not a few
bigoted individuals in the South. Rather, it was
the larger establishment. It was the system
itself.
White college students who had volunteered to
work for civil rights organizations in the South
learned about organizing, leadership, negotiating
skills and tactics, procuring resources, use of
media, protest tactics, and establishing clear
goals. They brought this knowledge back to their
universities to share with others. It was
empowering.
21The Student Movement
- Consequently, these idealistic young white
students who had participated in SNCC activities
in the South returned to their college campuses
with a radical message - Many of the social problems were built into
established institutions which function to
maintain the status quo and which were being run
by a managerial elite, or what C. Wright Mills
called the power elite. - Some students, frustrated with their bland school
newspaper, began to publish these ideas in their
own underground newspapers. This was the start
of the Free Speech Movement.
The American sociologist C. Wright Mills studied
American society in the 1950s and found that it
was not the pluralistic democracy promoted in
American grade schools. There were deep
structural problems that required structural
solutions.
22The Underground Press
- One of the main flowers of the free speech
movement was the proliferation of underground
newspapers across the country on and off the
campus. Virtually every city in the country had
at least one underground newspaper by 1969. - Examples of some of the best underground
newspapers include the Berkeley Barb, the Great
Speckled Bird (Atlanta), the San Francisco
Oracle, and the East Village Other (NY City). The
Charlotte underground press was called the
Inquisition, started in 1969. - The underground newspapers were typically
distributed on street corners in the
counterculture neighborhoods. Some had huge
circulations. The underground press helped
sustain all aspects of the emerging
counterculture and influenced young writers like
Hunter S. Thompson. - Click this link for an assortment of underground
newspapers relevant to the African American
experience.
23The Free Speech Movement
- The free speech movement came out of the student
movement and began in Berkeley in 1964. It
involved the Students for a Democratic Society
(SDS). - On college campuses, an example of institutional
corruption involved the rights of the students
toward free speech. - Colleges had become over-rationalized
administrative bureaucracies, with lots of formal
rules and regulations imposed on students. - In loco parentis gave the administrators parental
power over students. - At UC-Berkeley, the administration ruled that
non-campus political literature could not be
distributed on campus. - This seemed an open violation of academic ideals,
so students dug in, just as the administrators
did.
The Free Speech movement started on the Berkeley
campus of the University of California in 1964.
Students were organized by the SDS, who
understood that collective not individual
actions would be more effective in changing the
universitys rules.
24The Free Speech Movement
- Berkeley became a rallying point for other
college campuses to protest the absence of free
speech (or more specifically the censorship
policies of the university). - The SDS embarked on a campaign across Northern
urban regions to organize people, and eventually
they succeeded in winning many of these free
speech campaigns. - This did not involve SNCC, because by 1964 SNCC
was already beginning to purge its white
membership. By 1965, SDS and SNCC operated as two
separate movements, with no dramatic overriding
issue linking university life to black culture. - Yet such an issue was just emerging. LBJ had
decided to escalate the Vietnam War and by 1965
the draft was becoming an issue. It would be
Vietnam that would provide the common galvanizing
issue that united various elements of the
counterculture into a powerful force.
Mario Savio was one of the leaders of the free
speech movement. He is seen here at a 1964 free
speech rally on the Berkeley campus.
25Teach-Ins
- Vietnam was becoming increasingly relevant on
college campuses for several reasons - At that time college students were deferred from
the draft, so colleges had become safe havens - The draft politicized the war and forced young
people to learn about Vietnam - College campuses themselves were controversial
because they did military research and had
Reserve Officer Training Cores (ROTC) offices. - By 1965, many campuses offered teach-ins on
Vietnam, often sponsored by SDS. - These teach-ins were initially idealistic, but
became futile as the antiwar protestors witnessed
the escalation of the war. LBJ wasnt listening. - By 1965 there were 175,000 U.S. troops in
Vietnam, and Johnson was still rapidly escalating
the war.
This is a teach-in that occurred at UCLA.
Students were frustrated that they were not being
taught about Vietnam in their college classrooms.
With the help of sympathetic teachers and
administrators they organized these
extra-curricular teach-ins to learn more about
Vietnam history, U.S. policy in Southeast Asia,
the Cold War, etc. The teach-ins often exposed
the contradictions of U.S. policy in Vietnam.
26The Anti-War Movement
- By 1966, antiwar protestors were matching the
governments escalation of the war with their own
escalation of strategy a draft resistance
movement along with rising radicalism against the
military-industrial complex. - Throughout 1966-1967, antiwar confrontations
escalated. Government officials were confronted
with mass protestors wherever they went. - On college campuses, ROTC programs were being
challenged. These protestors were also
questioning college military contracts.
27The Rise of the Counterculture
- The Vietnam War provided the galvanizing element
that united the various protestors of the 1960s. - The counterculture was very broad. It was a loose
group of single-interest subcultures which came
together because of rising alienation from
established institutions. - Most of these groups had started out idealistic
about the prospects for reform, but had become
frustrated with the establishments slow pace of
change. The escalation of the war provided a
dramatic example of the establishments failure
to change. - Much of this confrontation was over deep core
values about what America stood for.
Virtually everyone at this late 1960s rock
concert had at least some countercultural values
in common. Almost all were opposed to U.S. policy
in Vietnam, and this united them. Most were also
distrustful of establishment authority figures,
and most believed in the issue of empowerment, or
taking control of ones own life. But Vietnam had
a visceral reality, given the escalation of the
war and the draft.
28Polarization of Western Culture
- America, like other Western cultures at this
time, was becoming polarized over two different
sets of values. - If the dominant culture promoted individualism,
the counterculture promoted communalism. - If the dominant culture promoted competition, the
counterculture promoted cooperation. - If the dominant culture promoted careerism, the
counterculture promoted personal self-discovery.
29The Counterculture
- The counterculture developed its own music,
fashion and lifestyles to symbolize its
alternative value system. - Many stopped wearing formal clothing and embraced
inexpensive loose-flowing dresses and casual
jeans and t-shirts as their anti-fashion
fashion statements. - More than anything else, the counterculture stood
for freedom and empowerment (against the
authoritarian establishment). - By the mid-1960s, Vietnam, along with the
lifestyle elements symbolizing personal freedom
(sex, drugs, and rocknroll) united the
disparate elements of the counterculture.
The counterculture rejected many of the
mainstream values and institutions of Western
culture, preferring a more humanistic value
system. Even the traditional marriage was
questioned. This is a photo of a hippie wedding,
and you can see that they have reinvented the
ceremony.
30The Counterculture
- The music of the counterculture had become
increasingly political with anti-establishment
messages. - Folk artists, with their emphasis on substantive
lyrics, were at the crest of the wave in the
early and mid-1960s. Artists like Bob Dylan, Joan
Baez, Pete Seeger, Phil Ochs, and Simon and
Garfunkel spoke to youth culture alienation and
the alienation of social marginals. - By the mid to late 1960s pop-rock bands like the
Beatles and the Rolling Stones would join in and
the counterculture would become a force that
could not be ignored. - The capital of the counterculture was San
Francisco, with Haight Ashbury the center of the
hippie element and Oakland, only 20 miles away,
the center of the antiwar radical element.
The Grateful Dead at their Haight-Ashbury house.
Communal living and sharing created a sense of
tribe, which was something missing from the
mainstream suburban culture.
31The Counterculture
- Drugs represented another countercultural
sacrament. Smoking pot became a ritual
symbolizing shared membership, with the joint
passed from person to person in a communal
manner. - Smoking pot was also an act of defiance against
the law. It symbolized the willingness of a
person to take a risk for something they stood
for. In American folklore, outlaws are romantic
and often symbolize freedom and personal
empowerment. - Pot also heightened the senses. The 60s lifestyle
promoted self-discovery merged with hedonism. - Being was more important than becoming.
- One was to learn by experience not just by
reading books as Jimi Hendrix captured on his
first album (1967), entitled Are You
Experienced. - By 1967 the countercultural lifestyle was a
Western culture sensation and San Francisco had
become Mecca.
Jimi Hendrixs ground-breaking 1967 album, Are
You Experienced, reflected the swirling
creativity, spontaneity, and explosive energy of
the psychedelic movement within the
counterculture. Click the album cover to hear the
title song in mp3 format.
32The Counterculture
- By the end of 1967, the antiwar movement a key
element of the counterculture - had reached a
crossroads. - One the one hand, respectable officials had
turned against the war and there was growing
debate among the straights. - By the Fall of 1967, public support for the
Vietnam war had declined to slightly more than
half the public. - On the other hand, many in the counterculture had
lost faith in Americas capacity to reform its
institutions and had become radicalized. - They saw Vietnam as a symptom of a deeper problem
and they sought revolutionary changes. - Which way the movement would go would be decided
by the pivotal year of 1968.
33The Womens Movement
- The womens movement was another element of the
counterculture that emerged in the early 1960s
but which did not clearly galvanize until the
late 1960s and early 1970s. - Although womens roles had changed toward wage
work since World War II, there was no
corresponding shift in womens ideals. - Sexism, the belief that women are naturally
inferior to men, was still popular during the
1960s. The prevailing attitude was that women
belonged in family roles. - Sociologists term this the cult of domesticity.
Women are viewed as exclusively mothers and
wives, with opposite characteristics compared
with men If men are rational, then women must be
emotional and if men are strong then women must
be weak. If men are the leaders, then women are
the followers. Her natural place is in the home.
Betty Friedan, the author of the 1963 book, The
Feminist Mystique, attends a womens protest
march in 1970 as the womens movement is taking
off.
34The Womens Movement
- In the 1960s, most jobs were still
sex-segregated. Women suffered under a
patriarchal system that paid men higher wages. - By the 1960s, most middle class women had at
least a part-time job, yet these jobs continued
to be womens jobs that paid low wages and
offered little upward mobility. - Many women were so deeply ingrained into the
ideology of traditional gender roles that they
considered it heresy to question them. The woman
was supposed to stand by her man. - At that time, unlike the civil rights movement,
there was no critical mass of protestors to
provide an alternative ideology.
During the 1940s the government promoted Rosie
the Riveter as a symbol of womens strength in
the industrial workforce. Women were getting
mixed messages in the post-war period as well.
35The Feminine Mystique, 1963
- Unlike the black civil rights movement, women
initially tended to see their problems as
individual rather than social. Their unhappiness
was due to flaws in their own personal lives. - In 1963, Betty Friedan published The Feminine
Mystique. This book exposed womens problems as
similar to the problems of racial minorities, and
not simply the result of the personal troubles. - Like blacks, women had been oppressed because of
their ascribed characteristics their physical
differences. - In the Feminine Mystique, Betty Friedan explained
how she became a good wife and mother, but she
felt that she was limited in these two roles and
that she could contribute more to society by
having additional roles. - This book helped ignite the modern womens
movement.
Betty Friedan
36The Womens Movement
- The basic principles of the civil rights movement
are humanism and equality and these messages
are just as relevant to women as the are to
racial minorities. In this way, the civil rights
movement helped bring about the womens movement. - The 1964 Civil Rights Act included sex
discrimination as an incidental feature that was
not taken very seriously at that time by
Congress. Indeed, the government initially failed
to act on complaints of sex discrimination, just
as they had been slow to act on racial
discrimination earlier. - In 1966, a group of activists formed NOW, the
National Organization for Women, to pressure for
the enforcement of the Civil Rights Act.
Shirley Chisholm, first feminist Congresswoman
and NOW member in the 1970s.
37The Womens Movement
- Many of the early NOW members had experience
working with SNCC, the SCLC and SDS and they knew
how to build a movement. - Yet they had been frustrated in those other
activist groups because even those groups tended
to be patriarchal. - Women were routinely steered toward clerical work
and away from leadership roles. - In 1964, black women at SNCC even staged a sit-in
to protest their sexist treatment by the men of
SNCC. Women were beginning to think that they
needed their own liberation movement. - The SDS also suffered from patriarchy.
This womens march occurred in 1971 in NY City.
The sign in the background on the left says The
women of Vietnam are our sisters. Feminists have
a sense of class consciousness for other women,
but this is difficult to achieve in a patriarchal
society, where women are socialized to obey the
dominant ideologies that define them as
naturally inferior. The significance of NOW
was that they helped instill this feminist class
consciousness, and this seeded the womens
liberation movement.
38The Womens Movement
- As women came together to share their personal
experiences, they developed a new sense of
strength and solidarity (class consciousness). - By 1967, many women activists decided they needed
to control their own agenda and they began to
meet separately from men. - This led to consciousness raising sessions, where
small groups of women would gather and discuss
their issues. Men were not allowed in these
meetings, largely because men tend to interrupt
women (another aspect of patriarchy). - In these sessions, women identified a key
structural problem in Western society
male-dominated institutions. The goal of the
womens movement was womens equality.
This is a consciousness-raising session. Women
take turn sharing their innermost thoughts with
each other about any aspect of their lives. As
one person talks, everyone listens without
interruption. These sessions were empowering for
women, who were routinely interrupted and
dominated in their everyday lives in patriarchal
society. These sessions functioned to
de-construct the patriarchal values and ideology
instilled in them from birth.
39The Counterculture
- In 1967, the womens movement was viewed largely
as a side-show. The ultimate impact of womens
liberation would not be felt until the 1970s. - William Chafe argues that there were three
pivotal movements during the 1960s that would
shape the society the civil rights movement, the
student-antiwar movement, and the womens
movement. - A fourth key movement we will discuss later was
the environmental movement, which began in the
late 1960s and blossomed in the 1970s.
40Summary of Value DifferencesMainstream Culture
VS The Counterculture
- Emphasis on Individual
- Competition
- Achievement
- Group superiority values
- Conformity/obedience
- Materialism and money
- Authoritarianism
- Militarism/imperialism
- Rationality/bureaucracy
- Self-discipline
- Delayed gratification
- Community
- Cooperation
- Happiness
- Equality social justice
- Freedom
- Spiritualism, sharing
- Democracy
- Diplomacy/sovereignty
- Emotionality/tribalism
- Laid back, go with the flow
- Immediate gratification
41The Counter-response
- Inevitably the protestors sparked a backlash of
resentment. - There was never a time during the 1960s when the
protestor activists represented a majority of the
American population. - The majority of Americans felt their way of life
was under assault. They had devoted their lives
to conforming to the dominant culture. - The louder the protestors were, the more
resistant and hostile was the backlash. - In 1964, only 34 of whites believed that blacks
were seeking too much too fast. By 1966, that
figure climbed to 85 as cities were burning and
Black Power! could be heard from the ghettos.
Antiwar posters like this enraged conservative
law-abiding patriotic citizens who saw the United
States as the greatest nation on Earth. Such
behavior wasnt just rude, it was down right
traitorous. Both sides were polarized by the late
1960s.
42The Counter-response
- Some of the backlash was due to blue collar
workers feeling threatened by minority gains. - Now their jobs were less secure because they
would have to compete with blacks and women. - By the late-60s, Vietnam had caused inflation
which threatened the incomes of Americans. - Some of the blue collar backlash was also due to
the nature of the counterculture. Many working
class workers resented these middle class
spoiled students who were not taking school
seriously. - This helps explain why there were so many police
riots directed against the counterculture. Part
of this was generational hostility, and part was
class hostility.
The police tend to be members of the working
class and they also tend to be older than
students, who tend to be members of the middle
class. Class, age, race, and other tensions
polarized Americans during the 1960s. The
reactionary counter-response tended to come from
the working class, older people, traditional
values and religious groups, and conservative
white males.
43The Counter-response
- The Silent Majority of Americans sensed a
crisis in values. - Every day they turned on the TV to see protestors
challenging traditional values and beliefs. - Yet during unstable times many people have a
tendency to cling to these traditional values. - They believed their sacred values of blind
patriotism, religion, monogamy, hard work,
consumerism, traditional sexuality,
know-your-place ethnicity, conformity to Biblical
and political authority, and traditional gender
roles were under attack. - By 1968 they began to rally around the flag with
messages like America love it or leave it.
44AMST 3100
End