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History of the Future

History of the Future. 7: The Future in the 1960s. The 1960s. Not that different from the 1950s Woodstock, etc. are late and marginal Continuing trends Cold war, nuclear build up Push for civil rights Economic prosperity Politics centrist (if sometimes bitter) Kennedy elected 1960.

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History of the Future

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  1. History of the Future 7: The Future in the 1960s

  2. The 1960s • Not that different from the 1950s • Woodstock, etc. are late and marginal • Continuing trends • Cold war, nuclear build up • Push for civil rights • Economic prosperity • Politics centrist (if sometimes bitter) • Kennedy elected 1960

  3. Foreign Crises • Kennedy gives open ended commitment to world-wide defense of freedom • Cuban Revolution – 1959 • Bay of Pigs Invasion, 1961 • Cuban Missile Crisis, 1962 • Closest approach to nuclear war • Limited Nuclear Test Ban Treaty, 1963 • Vietnam

  4. Vietnam • US involvement escalates slowly • Influenced by fear of “Domino Effect” • Early 60s – Advisors, Technology, Green Berets • US bombing from 1964 • 40,000 regular troops in 1965 • By 1968 there are 468,000 troops • Public tiring of war • Johnson privately considered unwinnable

  5. Great Society • Collection of ambitious social programs • Passed by LBJ as legacy of JFK • Civil Rights (Voting Rights Act) • War on Poverty • Medicare (elderly) • Medicaid (poor) • (at same time) Tax Cut • Record mixed • Great success for elderly

  6. Liberal Reform • Strongest in Supreme Court • Miranda ruling in 1966 • Creation of new “right to privacy” • Removal of censorship of pornography • Catholic and other churches modernize

  7. Sexual Revolution • Glorification of playboy lifestyle • Playboy magazine, 1953 • James Bond films • Oral contraceptives • Kinsey reports increase public discussion • Present homosexuality as common • Women’s Movement • The Feminine Mystique, 1963, Betty Friedan • Both sexes hurt by crushing domesticity

  8. The New Left • Students for a Democratic Society (1960) • Campus based movement • Sex, love, drugs, radicalism • Free speech • Anti-war activism • Racial equality • Shifts towards radical violence in late 60s • Fringe terrorist groups such as Weathermen

  9. Counterculture • Fairly marginal in reality • Can be seen as continuation of Utopian tradition • Personal lifestyle as political statement • Drugs • LSD (Popularized by Timothy Leary – Tune In, Turn On, Drop Out) • Some seize on as revolution • Music • Early 60s: Rock music is new mainstream of pop • Late 60s: Woodstock, Summer of Love, psychedelia

  10. Stealth Conservative Revival • Barry Goldwater defeated in 1964 • Rout of conservatism seems total • Origins of neo-Conservative movement • Reagan elected CA governor, 1966 • Nixon wins in 1968 • Pledges to get America out of war • “Peace with honor” • Domestic policies are not a major shift • Upsurge in Evangelism

  11. 1968 – The End of the 60s • Violence and Social Disruption • Race Riots in US cities • riots at Democratic Convention in Chicago • Martin Luther King killed • Bobby Kennedy killed • Students occupy Columbia campus • Nixon wins Presidential election • South shifts to Republicans

  12. Mysticism • “Eastern Spirituality” • The Maharishi (Transcendental Meditation) and other gurus • Zen • Carlos Castaneda • Series of allegedly factual reports on wise mystics

  13. Environmentalism • Origins in Progressive era • Teddy Roosevelt, Sierra Club, National parks • Emphasis on rational resource management • Becomes mass movement in 1960s • Sierra club has 100K members by 1970 • The Silent Spring, Rachael Carson, 1962 • Illuminates threat from pesticides • Humans as part of nature

  14. Science Fiction in the 1960s • Role of magazines begins to decline • Surge in paperback book publication • Some books break through to bigger audience • SF ideas seep into mainstream • Films, TV – eg Star Trek (1966-9), 2001 • Shift away from technology • Less interest in near-future space flight • More interest in sociology, spirituality

  15. The Future Gets Darker • Overpopulation • Environmental disaster & Ecology • Nuclear war (continuing theme) • Vietnam • Assumptions of straightforward progress increasingly challenged • Especially consumerism • Entropy becomes popular metaphor

  16. SF Loosens Up • Reflects, rather than leads social shifts • Sexual revolution • Women’s liberation • Emergence of superman is big theme • Visible in Dune • Use of mythical resonances • Many Messiah figures, some ambivalent

  17. Campus Bestsellers • Qualities • Philosophical • Tackle the “big questions” • Challenge/escape existing social order • Pass them on to your friends • Perennial favorites • Ayn Rand (Fountainhead, 1943) • Jack Kerouac (On the Road, 1957)

  18. Appeal Turns to the Fantastic • Campus favorites included • Steppenwolf (1930s) • Lord of the Rings (early 50s) • Catch 22 (1961) • Stranger in a Strange Land (1961) • One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest (1962) • Dune (1965) • The Magus (John Fowles, 1965) • Slaughterhouse Five (1969)

  19. Stranger in a Strange Land • Heinlein, published 1961 • Superman founds new religion • Based on superhuman powers (was raised on Mars) • Works miracles, “Groks” the world • Lots of sex with followers • “Disincorporates” enemies, eats followers • Science fiction as spiritual movement • Heinlein later develops incest fixation

  20. The “New Wave” in SF • Originates in Britain, mid-1960s • More literary & experimental approach • Darker and more pessimistic • Sex, drugs, pop-culture • New Worlds magazine • JG Ballard, Brian Aldiss, Michael Moorcock • Thomas M. Disch, Samuel R. Delaney from US • Leaves SF with more attitude & style

  21. Dangerous Visions • US Anthology • Published 1967 • Edited by Harlan Ellison • Launch of “New Wave” in US • Hipper style, more sex, more religion • Revolutionary claims just hype • Writers like Ellison, Roger Zelazny start scooping up SF awards

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