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* 762-769

* 762-769. Understand how public opinion changed during the Vietnam War into dissent against the war. Recognize examples of this dissent in songs of the 1960s . Identify other protest movements during the 1960s. End of Consensus: Vietnam War.

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* 762-769

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  1. * 762-769 • Understand how public opinion changed during the Vietnam War into dissent against the war. • Recognize examples of this dissent in songs of the 1960s. • Identify other protest movements during the 1960s.

  2. End of Consensus: Vietnam War • As we listen to some songs from the Vietnam War era: • Write down how the song either attacks or supports the war. • Follow along with the printed lyrics of the songs and use your highlighter or pen to mark passages in the lyrics that you think explain the meaning of the song (Pro/Anti-war).

  3. Songs about the Vietnam War • “War” • Edwin Starr • “Fish Cheer/Feel-Like-I’m-Fixin’-To-Die-Rag” • Country Joe and the Fish • “The Ballad of the Green Berets” • SSgt. Barry Sadler • “Where Have All The Flowers Gone” • Kingston Trio/Pete Seeger • “Eve of Destruction” • Barry McGuire • “California Dreamin’” • The Mamas & The Papas • “Lyndon Johnson Told the Nation” • Tom Paxton

  4. Songs about the Vietnam War • Read the lyrics to the other songs in the packet and determine the meaning of each as either pro-war or anti-war: • “The Times They Are a Changin’” – Bob Dylan • “Turn, Turn, Turn” – The Byrds • “For What It’s Worth” – Buffalo Springfield

  5. The End of Consensus • Little dissent until 1960s since McCarthyism had intimidated dissenters, protesters. • Voices of Dissent • Senator William Fulbright – “realists” • Direct protest against the Vietnam War • 1966-67 protesters blocked munitions trains, sent peace delegations to Vietnam and religious groups condemned the war. • Many protested against the Selective Service System arguing it favored the middle-class. • Deferments • Burning Draft Cards

  6. The End of Consensus • Little dissent until 1960s since McCarthyism had intimidated dissenters, protesters. • Voices of Dissent • Senator William Fulbright – “realists” • Direct protest against the Vietnam War • 1966-67 protesters blocked munitions trains, sent peace delegations to Vietnam and religious groups condemned the war. • Many protested against the Selective Service System arguing it favored the middle-class. • Deferments • Burning Draft Cards • Martin Luther King, Jr. • Protested on basis that blacks served disproportionately in the military during the Vietnam War.

  7. Demonstrators to end the war in Vietnam at the main gate of the White House, May 17, 1967, led by Dr. Benjamin Spock and Coretta Scott King

  8. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. gestures and shouts to his congregation in Ebenezer Baptist Church urging America to repent and abandon what he called its "Tragic, reckless adventure in Vietnam," Atlanta, Georgia, April 30, 1967

  9. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and protesters against the Vietnam War.

  10. A young American girl confronts the American National Guard outside the Pentagon, Washington, D.C., July 21, 1967.

  11. The End of Consensus • Little dissent until 1960s since McCarthyism had intimidated dissenters, protesters. • Voices of Dissent (Protest Movements) • Senator William Fulbright – “realists” • Draft Resistance against the Vietnam War • Martin Luther King, Jr. • Popular Media Protest songs • Students for a Democratic Society • Port Huron Statement (1962) – leader Tom Hayden called for a grass roots movement against consumerism, racism and Imperialism (war). • The Free Speech Movement • Mario Savio founded this group in 1964 at UC-Berkeley to build a “community of protest” to fight poverty. • LBJ RESPONDED with Model Cities Program in 1966.

  12. Mario Savio was an American political activist and a key member in the Berkeley Free Speech Movement at UC Berkeley. He called for a “community of protest” to fight poverty.

  13. The End of Consensus American Protest Movements • The “Feminist Critique” • Betty Friedan’s book “The Feminine Mystique” • Co-founder of the National Organization for Women (N.O.W.) • Fought for full economic equality for women in job market, attacking the “glass ceiling”. • The “sexual revolution” furthered this cause by bringing about by more reliable birth control methods made it easier for women to join the work force and “postpone” children.

  14. Other Protest Movements The End of Consensus • The Youth Culture • Large, general group of young people who felt alienated from society, expressed this through drug use, growing long hair, new rock music… • “Hippies” • Woodstock Festival (1969) in New York celebrated this new Youth Culture. The Woodstock Festival

  15. The End of Consensus • The Counterculture • Smaller but more radical group within the “Youth Culture” group that experimented with more radical drugs, studied Eastern religions. • Timothy Leary (Harvard professor) “tune in, turn on, drop out”.. • Writer Aldous Huxley – “Brave New World”, “Doors of Perception” • Music • Bob Dylan, Pete Seeger, Janis Joplin, Jim Morrison, Jimi Hendrix, The Beatles, Rolling Stones…all included forms of social protest. • Communes • Tried to combine individual freedom with cooperativeliving as a rejection of the traditional family unit. • Cults • Sun Myung Moon’s Unification Church • Jim Jones People’s Temple

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