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The Counterculture Of The Hippie Movement

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Introduction

After the end of the Second World War in 1945 a change of values, beliefs started to appear among the youth generation. This young people “coming” from the Baby Boom era, term given to the period of time when an increase of births rate took place in America, started challenging the modern society they were living in. The term “counterculture” started to appear in form of movements, mainly initiated by young people who rejected the mainstream society rules. In the following report I will be focusing on the hippie movement that started in 1960s and how the. Woodstock Music and Art Festival of 1969 became the most important music festival of the 1960s counterculture and thus a symbol of the hippie movement. Identity, body and …show more content…

The symbol for this period that occurred between 1964 and 1972 was a “peace” sign and it can be easily justified as the main values defended by this young people were words like “harmony”, “love”, among others.
The counterculture movement was expressed through music, having Rock representing a key role in this process through live performing acts from artists as Pink Floyd, Rolling Stones to Jimi Hendrix or The Beatles, who ended up to become the most prominent commercial exponents of the “psychedelic rock revolution” in the late 1960s
"Psychedelic revolution" in the late 1960s. Literature, art and film counterculture were also other areas where the counterculture had its impacts. Films where the focus was the changing that was happening in the world such as “easy rider” in 1969 or the documentary about “The Woodstock Festival of 1969”. Theatre musical pieces as “hair” where the war in Vietnam, race issues and other values were contested. In literature, the term “underground newspaper” is given to an independent newspaper focusing on countercultures issues.
By the end of the 1960s, America was a divided nation because not all the people were sensible to this movement as they thought it reflected “a pointless rebellious, unpatriotic and an arrogant attack on America’s traditional cultural and moral values”.
One thing that everyone agree is that the 1960s were a distinct

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