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Counterculture Of The 1960s

Decent Essays

In a decade of generational rebellion, the 60s was a time of peace, war, sex and drugs as the newest and the largest generation of Americans entered college, an environment that encouraged ideas such as freedom and independence from leading authorities of the time. Advancements in media and technology projected a bias representation of events during the 1960s, aiding the counterculture as they challenge societal norms, leaving a lasting opposition against authority. This development in technology and media allowed for the counterculture youth to challenge and defy the government and authorities in power as they expressed their new desire for freedom and independence.
Media and technological advancements during the 1960s formed a new outlet …show more content…

With televisions becoming “a common piece of household furniture,” (John Wiley & Sons Australia 2005, p.1), events such as the Vietnam War or Civil Right protests like the Freedom Rides left bigger impacts on citizens as they witnessed the cruel happenings from their lounge rooms uncensored. Especially to America’s baby boomers, the largest generation in the United States at the time, the easier access to news created a “growing sense of disillusionment with governments and the way in which societies were operating,” (John Wiley & Sons Australia 2005, p.1). The uncensored coverage of the Vietnam War strengthened this feeling as the first televised war displayed a new side to the conflict, one that had been hidden by government and authoritative propaganda in the past, producing a stigma towards the event. After her father’s involvement in the …show more content…

Through media counterculture youth publicly began to protests their fears and dislikes towards the current society. Two major contributors towards the protests were university groups, the Students for a Democratic Society and the Free Speech movement. Both movements similarly protested against events such the Vietnam War, nuclear power, poverty, racism and campus regulations (The Student Movement and the Counterculture n.d., para 24). Tom Hayden, a university student and young radical describes these groups similar motives in his Port Huron Statement, stating that, “we are the people of this generation bred in at least modest comfort, housed now in universities, looking uncomfortably to the world we inherit,” (Walsh T, K 2010, para. 4) implicitly implying that despite their somewhat perfect up brings, their desire for freedom and independence, which is nurtured by the investment in universities, encourages a disliking towards the world they will one day inherit and fear of the consequences due current events. Advancements in media and technology however allowed for the youth to express their fear of through future through new and unheard of twist within a variety of different mediums. Within art, artist such as Andy Warhol challenge what was

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