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Examples Of Individualism In The 1950's

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Throughout the 1950’s the United States presented itself as an inflexible nation and worked hard to distinguish itself as a powerful country with a bolstering economy that could be observed within its middle class and one cherished by the nuclear family. The 1950’s is projected as a time of America’s best and has always been represented as an idyllic period that should be modeled throughout generations, but the problem arises when this “American Dream” is only available to the ones who can afford it or have the advantage of being born white. When people clearly see discrimination or a dividing line in their community history tells us that people will rebel. These rebels or outsiders in the 1950’s took to individualism instead of revolution or war and in the process created an identity that didn’t belong to the ideal American at the time or deflected any conforming to a Nation who urged it. Two characters that represent this outsider persona comes in the form of a “greaser” and ironically both are played by the same actor Henry …show more content…

This can be viewed by the rising migration to the suburbs during the 1950’s and the distinct class and ethnic separation during the era. For the few that didn't conform or buy into the flannel suit wearing, Levitt home owning, and green bean casserole eating propaganda were considered outsiders. These nonconformist were working class Americans who mostly lived in impoverished neighborhoods and were subjected to ridicule, while also being feared as a danger to society. During the late 1950’s outsiders or rebels were looked at as a plague that could destroy the so called suburban way of life and contaminate the middle class; breaking the backbone within the body of America. These outsiders took on the label as “rebels”, “beatniks” and eventually the term “greasers” was

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