I. Introduction A. Counterculture B. Music Revolution 1. Profit Motive 2. Ideal Community 3. Political Reaction II. Town Profit A. Loss Wages B. Local Business Profit III. Hippies Meet The Locals A. Positivity B. Community Ideals strengthened IV. Government Reaction A. Zoning Laws B. Political Fallout V. Conclusion A. Summary B. Personal Reflection VI. Bibliography A. Books B. Websites Three Days of Peace and Music:
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|Chapter 3: Culture |[pic] | |Chapter Overview | | |PART I: CHAPTER OUTLINE |[pic] | |What is Culture? | | |Culture and Human Intelligence |
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Written Report In Social Dimension ( Dimensions of Multicultural Education and Growth of Student Subculture ) Submitted by: Teresita R. Dagook BSED 4 – MAPEH Submitted to: Mrs. Evelyn A. Lanusa TFri 2:30-4:00 Dimensions of Multicultural Education There are five dimensions of multicultural education according to Banks (1997). They are: 1. Content Integration. It deals with the extent to which teachers use examples
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The source itself is an extract of The Port Huron Statement of 1962. It was produced by 58 members of the Student for a Democratic Society‚ including large contributions by their Field Secretary Tom Hayden. The 25‚700 word statement aimed to “articulate the fundamental problems of American society and laid a radical vision for a better future”. The manifesto advances the call for participatory democracy in which each individual citizen could help make “social decisions determining the quality and
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Every society contains numerous kinds of subcultures and countercultures that shape the larger picture of the population. Many of these counter cultures and subcultures evolved from each other‚ including the hippie counterculture and the hipster subculture. These two different cultures have similar values‚ however the hippie culture had far more extreme norms and values than that of the hipsters. The hippie culture was born in the 1960’s as the African American rights grew and the United State’s
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Week One Assignment Chapter One The Sociological Perspective The sociological perspective provides a specific view of the world. Briefly describe this perspective and the assumptions this perspective is based on. The sociological perspective puts emphasis on the social context in which people live in and how these contexts influence their lives. At the center of this perspective is the question of how groups influence people‚ especially how people are influence by their society. Sociologists
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Citing reasons as to why it is frowned upon to be associated with rock n’ roll such as: it was a “distortion of local customs”‚ fear of subversion to the counterculture‚ and “rebellion without a cause”. The fear of subversion to the counterculture must be a constant fear of elites. It has been a theme in many texts I have read recently‚ elites do not want the youth to latch onto something they regard as bad or
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The 1970s in many ways were a continuation of the 60s‚ there were confusion‚ civil disorder‚ and growing violence. Many more Americans aligned themselves with the protesters against the ongoing war in Vietnam. The fight for equality for African Americans‚ Women‚ Native Americans‚ gays and lesbians continued. The criminal actions of President Richard Nixon significantly diminished the American citizen’s abiding faith in their government and political leaders. The multitude of social issues that relentlessly
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rumored that if you take the capital letters from the title‚ you get LSD. By openly using drugs to influence their music‚ The Beatles changed popular culture. They simply took a counterculture‚ allowed it to change and evolve them as artist simultaneously reflecting this change in their popular music; thus turning a counterculture‚ into a popular
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(JFK and the 1960’s) The more autocratic change of power in the federal government allowed the president more control after the New Frontier and Great Society‚ which was caused by the shift in the Civil Rights Era and by civil tension in the counterculture from the Vietnam War and Watergate. The shift in power which gave the president more control began with the Executive order 9981 signed by President Harry S. Truman in July of 1948. It allowed every person regardless of race‚ origin or religion
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