Title: Culture and Counterculture
1Culture and Counterculture
- The Main Idea
- The counterculture that emerged in the 1960s and
1970s left a lasting impact on American life. - Reading Focus
- What led to the rise of the counterculture?
- What was life like in the counterculture?
- How did mainstream American society react to the
counterculture? - What legacy did the counterculture leave behind?
2The Rise of the Counterculture
- The counterculture of the 1960s was a rebellion
of teens and young adults against mainstream
American society. - Young Americans believed that societys values
were hollow and its priorities were misplaced. - They called the mainstream the Establishment.
- They wanted to create an alternative culture
based on peace and love.
3Where did the counterculture come from?
The number of teens and young adults in the
United States rose dramatically in the 1960s.
These young people were living in turbulent
times threat of nuclear war, racial
discrimination and segregation, the Vietnam War,
and environmental pollution.
4Rising Student Activism
- Students on college campuses began rebelling
against school policies they considered
restrictive, unjust, or not relevant. - At the University of California at Berkeley
students protested when school officials banned
speech making and political organizing at the
entrances to the campus. - The events at Berkeley marked the beginning of
the Free Speech Movement, which swept campuses
across the nation. - Mainstream Americans were shocked as they
expected young people not to question authority.
5Life in the counterculture
- Counterculture
- Thousands of teens and young adults left school,
jobs, and traditional home life. - Haight-Ashbury in San Francisco was a famous
center for the 1960s counterculture
- Hippie Culture
- Rejected materialism and the work ethic of the
older generation - Eastern religions, astrology, the occult, and
illegal drugs - The goal of most hippies was to find freedom and
spiritual enlightenment - Height of hippie movement was summer of 1967
(Summer of Love) - The hippie lifestyle offered a pleasant
alternative to social concerns such as racism,
sexism, and conflicts over the war in Vietnam
6Mainstream Reactions to the Counterculture
Some observers of the counterculture were put off
by the unkempt appearance of hippies.
On a deeper level, many mainstream Americans
objected to the unconventional values of the
counterculture. They saw hippies as
disrespectful, uncivilized, and threatening.
To many in the Establishment, it appeared that
society was unraveling. The television show All
in the Family reflected American society in that
it illustrated that mainstream America did not
embrace counterculture
7Legacy of the Counterculture
- Attitudes
- The 1960s counterculture had the most lasting
impact on attitudes towards lifestyles and social
behavior, art and music. - Attitudes about sexual behavior loosened.
- People explored topics that were once taboo.
- Art and Film
- New style called pop art emerged.
- Andy Warhol led the pop art movement.
- Film broadened its subject matter as censorship
rules relaxed.
- Music
- The Beatles brought new techniques and ideas to
rock and roll. - Bob Dylan wrote political songs and became the
spokesperson for his generation. - Woodstock Music and Art Fair was considered among
the most important events of the counterculture
movement