Hippies Essay

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    growth of the rock music, increase of drug, alcohol abuse and freedom about sex. Hippies were basically blithe about a lot of things that they did not like. These were signs to get noticed about how they wished to get away from the American culture. One of their slogans was, "Get every creature so stoned they can't stand the plastic shit of American culture" (1960's 200). A history professor, Terry H. Anderson wrote, "Hippies commonly took drugs to expand their consciousness, to rebel against the establishment

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    Imagine if you didn't have people telling you what you can and can't do… Well, some people are against that even though it doesn't affect them at all. People need to start worrying about themselves and not what others do. Everyone should join The Hippy Movement; it will cause no violence, allow you to have freedom and peace without anyone telling you otherwise. The first main point in The Hippie Movement is that all they wanted to do was live in their own society. They established a society called

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    During the 1960s, a new culture spread throughout the United States, stirring up the Flower Power movement as well as the aversion from the typical American lifestyle. These “Hippies” as they were known, didn’t want to fit in with the mainstream crowd. The name “hippie” was taken from the term “hipster”. It described how the Hippies believed that we should make love, not war, their vocal opposition to the United States’ involvement in the Vietnam War, and the increasingly rocky road to shared civil rights

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    freedom, peace, and love. Hippies acted against white upper middle class lifestyle because they thought it was based on the wrong ideology. Hippies were against consumerism and American suburban life of the late 1950s and early 1960s was embodied in itself the idea of consumerism. Hippies, on the other hand, felt better about communal life with equal distribution of social goods. Traditional “bigger share” and consumerist greed as concepts of American society were despised by Hippies. White middle class

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    subculture was originally a youth movement beginning in the United States around the early 1960s and consisted of a group of people who opposed political and social orthodoxy, choosing an ideology that favored peace, love, and personal freedom. The hippies rejected established institutions, criticized middle class values, opposed nuclear weapons and the Vietnam War, were usually eco-friendly and vegetarians, and promoted the use of psychedelic drugs. They created their own communities, listened to psychedelic

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    which affected American life. The movement originated on college campuses in the United States, and it spread to other countries, including Canada and Britain (“ The Hippies And American Values”). The hippie also spelled hippy or hipster (45). 1955 to 1975 was known as their movement which against the Vietnam War. Although hippies arose in part as opposed the war, they were not directly engaged in politics. Not only is it important to know the history of the hippie, but also the culture they developed

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    Hippies started as a youth movement which emerged in the United States during the mid-1960s and spread to other throughout the world. The word hippie is derived hipster, and was used to describe "beatniks" who had moved into New York City's Greenwhich Village and San Francisco's Haight Ashbury district. The name comes from “hip,” a term applied to the Beats of the 1950s, such as Allen Ginsenburgand and Jack Kerouac, who were generally considered to be the precursors of hippies. The term means “currently

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    to create new opportunities to learn and educate themselves not just for themselves but for other people as well. A lot of significant changes went on throughout the sixties and some of the people who were involved in that change were Beatniks and Hippies or “hipsters”. Both of these groups each had a strong influence on society and politics in the time of the counter culture movement during the sixties. The Beatniks were a group that influenced the creative and artistic movement during the sixties

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    The following research project will discuss how exactly the hippie counterculture movement believed the dominant mainstream culture was corrupt, inherently flawed and how Hippies therefore challenged these values by striving for their own utopia. During the 1950s, a sense of uniformity and conformity was prevalent in the American society, as the young and old alike followed the mainstreams norms rather than striking out on their own. The 1950s was a time of unprecedented wealth for many Americans

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    with a wide breadth of visual sources with which to corroborate other materials. This is especially true when examining the documentation of the counterculture in the 1960s. A book called Hippie compiled by Barry Miles offers a composite portrait of hippies in America in the 1960s, contextualized with other images from other key events outside of the realm of the

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