Questioning Authority

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
An Era of Social Change How much can society change?
Advertisements

Women’s Liberation Movement
CHAPTER 23…”An Era of Social Change”
Other Civil Rights Movements
Women’s Liberation Movement
Betty Friedan’s “The Feminine Mystique”
Chapter 21 review. Counterculture- movement that upheld values different from the mainstream culture Generation gap- - lack of understanding and communication.
Latinos Native Americans WomenCountercultureOdds and Ends
Politics of Protest CHAPTER 18. Although more women wanted to enter the workforce, employers were exclusively hiring men for higher paying positions.
Unit 7 Social Change Chapter 23. Latinos Cesar Chavez – United Farm Workers Union Grew from 3 to 9 million in 1960’s Mexico, Puerto Rico, Cuba, Dominican.
Chapter 14(B) The Expanding Struggle for Equal Rights
Goal 11Part 7 Social Movements. Latino Civil Rights Movement Cesar Chavez  Migrant farm worker, political and civil rights activist  Organized UFWOC.
■Essential Question ■Essential Question: –What were the demands of the various “power movements” of the 1960s & 1970s? ■Warm-Up Question: –Examine the.
Power Movements of the 1960s & 70s
Women, Indians, and Hispanics Fight for Change Sections 30.1 and 30.2.
Objective Identify major social movements including, but not limited to, those involving women, young people, and the environment, and evaluate the.
Chapter 23, Section 1 & 2 Three Groups Struggle for Their Rights 1.Identify the three groups mentioned in these two sections that fought for their rights.
III. The Struggle for Equal Rights
Era of Activism I. Women’s Rights Movement 1. Feminism a. equality for men and women -political -economic -social b. By 1960 over 38% of American women.
■Essential Question ■Essential Question: –What were the demands of the various “power movements” of the 1960s & 1970s? ■Warm-Up Question: –Examine the.
CHP. 23 AN ERA OF SOCIAL CHANGE IN THIS CHAPTER YOU WILL LEARN ABOUT THE QUEST FOR RADICAL CHANGE INITIATED BY MANY GROUPS IN THE 1960S.
Women and Minority Groups in America social, political, economic status.
Chapter 21 A Time of Social Change Mr. Brink. The Establishment.
11.03 Identify major social movements including, but not limited to, those involving women, young people, and the environment and evaluate the impact of.
Essential Questions Why did the civil rights movement splinter and a series of social and political crisis result after 1965 despite the significant previous.
UNIT 13: VIETNAM WAR ERA.
Protest Movements.
Topic
The Chicano Movement
Who Wants to be a Millionaire ?
Goal 11Part 7 Social Movements.
Essential Question: What were the demands of the various “power movements” of the 1960s & 1970s? Warm-Up Question: Examine the “power groups” on the chart.
Good Morning! Goal 3 EOC Packet Check Vietnam Review
VOCABULARY Cesar Chavez – helped to organize the National Farm workers Association. Organized a grape boycot to help fight for better rights for migrant.
The Widening Struggle: An Era of Change
Influence of Civil Rights
Counterculture -non-conformists =mostly white middleclass college youths who had grown disillusioned w/war & injustices in US in 1960s. -”Tune in, turn.
Ch 31 Notes.
Social Change.
Good Morning! Goal 3 EOC Packet Check Vietnam Review
Counterculture (influenced by beat movement of the 1950s)
Political Protest Movements of the 1960s and 1970s
Counterculture and the 1960s
1960s Counterculture Movements
Section 2 Women Fight for Equality
An Era of Social Change.
Women’s Rights Movement (Second Feminist Movement)
An era of protest and change
Women Fight for Equality
Power Movements of the 1960s & 70s
Alan Brinkley, American History 14/e
Social Movements of the 1960s
Essential Question: What were the demands of the various “power movements” of the 1960s & 1970s? Warm-Up Question: Examine the “power groups” on the chart.
Essential Question: What were the demands of the various “power movements” of the 1960s & 1970s? Warm-Up Question: Examine the “power groups” on the chart.
Essential Question: What were the demands of the various “power movements” of the 1960s & 1970s?
Essential Question: What were the demands of the various “power movements” of the 1960s & 1970s? Warm-Up Question: Examine the “power groups” on the chart.
Turbulent Times (The 1960s and 1970s
Essential Question: What were the demands of the various “power movements” of the 1960s & 1970s? Warm-Up Question: Examine the “power groups” on the chart.
Power Movements of the 1960s & 70s
The 1970s!.
Essential Question: What were the demands of the various “power movements” of the 1960s & 1970s? Warm-Up Question: Examine the “power groups” on the chart.
1960s s social movements.
1960s s social movements.
Unit 5B Part 4: Counterculture & Other Americans’ Rights
Ch 23 Notes.
Movements, Counterculture, and Discontent
Power Movements 1970’s and beyond.
Alan Brinkley, American History 14/e
An Era of Social Change.
Presentation transcript:

Questioning Authority

Anti-War Movement Students for a Democratic Society (SDS), 1962 Participatory Democracy Draft protests Kent State, 1970

Counterculture of 1960s Hippies Sex, Drugs, Rock ‘n’ Roll LSD and Timothy Leary Summer of Love, Haight-Ashbury, 1967 Sexual Revolution Woodstock, NY, 1969 New Age Spirituality

Women’s Liberation Betty Friedan and the Feminine Mystique, 1963 National Organization for Women (NOW), 1966 Equality in the Public sphere v. the Private Gloria Steinem Miss America, 1968 Roe v. Wade, 1973

The Problem That Has No Name “The problem lay buried, unspoken, for many years in the minds of American women. It was a strange stirring…Each suburban wife struggled with [it] alone…- she was afraid to ask even of herself the silent question-Is this all?” - Betty Freidan

Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) Proposed amendment to constitution that prohibits sex discrimination March, 1972 passed Congress Ratified by 35 states Opposition from labor and other women Phyllis Shlafy

Chicano Movement Cesar Chavez & the United Farm Workers Reies Tijerina Student walkouts Chicano studies, 1968 “Corky” Gonzales, I am Joaquin Movimiento Estudiantil Chicano de Aztlan (MEChA) Brown Berets

Chicano Movement My fathers have lost the economic battle  and won the struggle of cultural survival.  And now! I must choose between the paradox of  victory of the spirit, despite physical hunger,  or to exist in the grasp of American social neurosis,  sterilization of the soul and a full stomach.  Rodolfo “Corky” Gonzales Excerpt from “I am Joaquin”

American Indian Movement Established 1968, Minneapolis Assertion of tribal and land rights Occupation of Alcatraz, 1969 Occupation of buildings at Wounded Knee, 1973 “Red Power”

Gay Liberation Movement Demanded tolerance and respect Stonewall riot in New York City, 1969 Activists emphasized the importance of “coming out”

Conservative Backlash Why did conservatives respond negatively to the 1960s counterculture movements? FBI, CIA, and military intelligence used to infiltrate counterculture organizations COINTELPRO (FBI Counterintelligence Program) “Enemies list” ranged from liberals in Hollywood to university presidents

Questioning Authority Key Terms: SDS, Haight-Ashbury, The Feminine Mystique, NOW, Gloria Steinam, United Farm Workers, “Corky” Gonzales, American Indian Movement, Stonewall Riot, COINTELPRO