1960s  

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 +[[Image:Stonewall Inn 1969.jpg|thumb|200px|left|alt=A black and white photograph of The Stonewall Inn, showing half of a sign that was placed in the window by the Mattachine Society several days following the riots|The [[Stonewall Inn]], taken September [[1969]]. The sign in the window reads: "We homosexuals plead with our people to please help maintain peaceful and quiet conduct on the streets of the Village—[[Mattachine]]".]]
 +{| class="toccolours" style="float: left; margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 2em; font-size: 85%; background:#c6dbf7; color:black; width:30em; max-width: 40%;" cellspacing="5"
 +| style="text-align: left;" |
 +"Novels were in the pockets of American soldiers who went to Vietnam and in the pockets of those who protested against the [[Vietnam War]]: [[Hermann Hesse]]’s ''[[Steppenwolf (novel)|Steppenwolf]]'' (1927) and [[Carlos Castaneda]]’s ''[[Journey to Ixtlan]]'' (1972) had become [[cult classics]] of inner [[resistance]]. Whilst it was difficult to learn anything about Siberia’s concentration camps in the strictly censored Soviet media, it was a novel, [[Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn]]’s ''[[One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich]]'' (1962) that eventually gave the world an inside view."--Sholem Stein
 +<HR>
 +"Photographers […] included [[Guy Bourdin]], [[Francis Giacobetti]], [[Jean-François Jonvelle]], [[Sarah Moon]], [[Helmut Newton]] and [[Jeanloup Sieff]]. Both [[Peccinotti]] and [[Feurer]] also proved their talents as photographers ."--''[[The Sixties: Britain and France, 1962-1973 - The Utopian Years]]'' (1997)
 +|}
[[Image:Guerrillero Heroico - Che Guevara by Alberto Diaz Gutierrez.jpg|thumb|200px|By the late 1960s, revolutionary [[Che Guevara]]'s [[Guerrillero Heroico|famous image]] had become a popular symbol of rebellion for many youth.]] [[Image:Guerrillero Heroico - Che Guevara by Alberto Diaz Gutierrez.jpg|thumb|200px|By the late 1960s, revolutionary [[Che Guevara]]'s [[Guerrillero Heroico|famous image]] had become a popular symbol of rebellion for many youth.]]
[[Image:Perversion for Profit.jpg|thumb|right|200px|A typical image from ''[[Perversion for Profit]]'': a photograph taken from a [[lesbian pornography]] magazine and [[censorship|censored]] with [[censor bar|colored rectangles]]]] [[Image:Perversion for Profit.jpg|thumb|right|200px|A typical image from ''[[Perversion for Profit]]'': a photograph taken from a [[lesbian pornography]] magazine and [[censorship|censored]] with [[censor bar|colored rectangles]]]]
{{Template}} {{Template}}
 +
 +{|class="toc hlist" id="toc" summary="Contents" style="margin-left:auto; margin-right:auto; text-align:center;"
 +|colspan="3" |
 +|-
 +! style="text-align:right; width:310px;"|<< [[1950s]]
 +! style="width:125px;"|
 +! style="text-align:left; width:310px;"|[[1970s]] >>
 +|}
The '''1960s''' [[list of decades|decade]] refers to the years from [[January 1]], [[1960]] to [[December 31]], [[1969]], inclusive. '''The Sixties''' has also come to refer to the complex of inter-related cultural and political events which occurred in approximately that period, in Western countries, particularly [[United Kingdom|Britain]], [[France]], the [[United States]] and [[Germany|West Germany]]. [[Social upheaval]] was not limited to just these nations, reaching large scale in nations such as [[Japan]], [[Mexico]] and [[Canada]] as well. The term is used both nostalgically by those who participated in those events, and pejoratively by those who regard the time as a period whose harmful effects are still being felt today. The decade was also labeled the '''[[Swinging London|Swinging Sixties]]''' because of the [[libertine]] attitudes that emerged during this decade. The '''1960s''' [[list of decades|decade]] refers to the years from [[January 1]], [[1960]] to [[December 31]], [[1969]], inclusive. '''The Sixties''' has also come to refer to the complex of inter-related cultural and political events which occurred in approximately that period, in Western countries, particularly [[United Kingdom|Britain]], [[France]], the [[United States]] and [[Germany|West Germany]]. [[Social upheaval]] was not limited to just these nations, reaching large scale in nations such as [[Japan]], [[Mexico]] and [[Canada]] as well. The term is used both nostalgically by those who participated in those events, and pejoratively by those who regard the time as a period whose harmful effects are still being felt today. The decade was also labeled the '''[[Swinging London|Swinging Sixties]]''' because of the [[libertine]] attitudes that emerged during this decade.
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The counterculture movement dominated the second half of the 1960s, its most famous moments being the [[Summer of Love]] in San Francisco in 1967, and the [[Woodstock Festival]] in [[upstate New York]] in 1969. [[Psychedelic drugs]], especially [[LSD]], were widely used medicinally, spiritually and recreationally throughout the late 1960s, and were popularized by [[Timothy Leary]] with his slogan "[[Turn on, tune in, drop out]]". [[Ken Kesey]] and the [[Merry Pranksters]] also played a part in the role of "turning heads on". [[Psychedelic]] influenced the music, artwork and films of the decade, and a number of prominent musicians died of drug overdoses (see [[27 Club]]). There was a growing interest in Eastern religions and philosophy, and many attempts were made to found communes, which varied from supporting free love to religious puritanism. The counterculture movement dominated the second half of the 1960s, its most famous moments being the [[Summer of Love]] in San Francisco in 1967, and the [[Woodstock Festival]] in [[upstate New York]] in 1969. [[Psychedelic drugs]], especially [[LSD]], were widely used medicinally, spiritually and recreationally throughout the late 1960s, and were popularized by [[Timothy Leary]] with his slogan "[[Turn on, tune in, drop out]]". [[Ken Kesey]] and the [[Merry Pranksters]] also played a part in the role of "turning heads on". [[Psychedelic]] influenced the music, artwork and films of the decade, and a number of prominent musicians died of drug overdoses (see [[27 Club]]). There was a growing interest in Eastern religions and philosophy, and many attempts were made to found communes, which varied from supporting free love to religious puritanism.
 +==Gay rights movement==
 +The United States, in the middle of a social revolution, led the world in LGBT rights in the late 1960s and early 1970s. Inspired by the civil-rights movement and the women's movement, early gay-rights pioneers had begun, by the 1960s, to build a movement troll. These groups were rather conservative in their practices, emphasizing that gays were just like straights and deserved full equality. This philosophy would be dominant again after [[AIDS]], but by the very end of the 1960s, the movement's goals would change and become more radical, demanding a right to be different, and encouraging [[gay pride]].
 +
 +The symbolic birth of the [[gay rights movement]] would not come until the decade had almost come to a close. Gays were not allowed by law to congregate. Gay establishments such as the [[Stonewall Inn]] in New York City were routinely raided by the police to arrest gay people. On a night in late June 1969, LGBT people resisted, for the first time, a police raid, and rebelled openly in the streets. This uprising called the [[Stonewall Riots]] began a new period of the LGBT rights movement that in the next decade would cause dramatic change both inside the LGBT community and in the mainstream American culture.
 +==Sexual revolution==
 +:''[[Sexual revolution in 1960s America]], [[Sexual revolution in England]], [[Sexual revolution in Scandinavia]], [[Sexual revolution in Germany]]''
 +One suggested trigger for the modern [[sexual revolution]] was the development of the [[The Pill|birth control pill]] in 1960, which gave women access to easy and reliable [[contraception]].
==Visual art== ==Visual art==
-:''[[1960s art]]''+:''[[Neo avant-garde]]''
Along with artists such as [[Roy Lichtenstein]] and [[Claes Oldenburg]], [[Andy Warhol]] appropriated images from commercial art and popular culture as well as the techniques of these industries. Often called "[[pop art|pop artists]]", they saw mass popular culture as the main vernacular culture, shared by all irrespective of education. These artists fully engaged with the ephemera produced from this mass-produced culture, embracing expendability and distancing themselves from the evidence of an artist's hand. Along with artists such as [[Roy Lichtenstein]] and [[Claes Oldenburg]], [[Andy Warhol]] appropriated images from commercial art and popular culture as well as the techniques of these industries. Often called "[[pop art|pop artists]]", they saw mass popular culture as the main vernacular culture, shared by all irrespective of education. These artists fully engaged with the ephemera produced from this mass-produced culture, embracing expendability and distancing themselves from the evidence of an artist's hand.
 +
 +The most important art movement in the 1960s was [[Pop Art]], and its most important [[exponent]] [[Andy Warhol]], whose brash commercial imagery became a Fine Art staple. Warhol also minimised the role of the artist, often employing assistants to make his work and using mechanical means of production, such as [[Screen-printing|silkscreen printing]]. This marked a change from [[Modernism]] to [[Post-Modernism]].
==Music== ==Music==
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==Cinema== ==Cinema==
-:''[[1960s in film]]'' 
-The highest-grossing film of the decade was 20th Century Fox's ''[[The Sound of Music (film)|The Sound of Music]]'' (1965). 
- 
-Some of Hollywood's most notable [[Blockbuster (entertainment)|blockbuster films]] of the 1960s include:  
-<!--at august 2012, unclear order. probably year of release? research before alphabetizing. probably best to leave release-year order with year of release appended following title--> 
- 
-* ''[[Psycho (1960 film)|Psycho]]'' 
-* ''[[Breakfast at Tiffany's (film)|Breakfast at Tiffany's]]'' 
-* ''[[Spartacus (1960 film)|Spartacus]]'' 
-* ''[[Lawrence of Arabia (film)|Lawrence of Arabia]]'' 
-* ''[[The Hustler (film)|The Hustler]]'' 
-* ''[[Carnival of Souls]]'' 
-* ''[[The Birds (film)|The Birds]]'' 
-* ''[[The Pink Panther]]'' 
-* ''[[Dr. Strangelove]]'' 
-* ''[[Mary Poppins (film)|Mary Poppins]]'' 
-* ''[[The Sound of Music (film)|The Sound of Music]]'' 
-* ''[[Doctor Zhivago (film)|Doctor Zhivago]]'' 
-* ''[[The Jungle Book (1967 film)|The Jungle Book]]'' 
-* ''[[The Dirty Dozen]]'' 
-* ''[[Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid]]'' 
-* ''[[Bonnie and Clyde (film)|Bonnie and Clyde]]'' 
-* ''[[Cool Hand Luke]]'' 
-* ''[[The Graduate]]'' 
-* ''[[Rosemary's Baby (film)|Rosemary's Baby]]'' 
-* ''[[Midnight Cowboy]]'' 
-* ''[[Head (film)|Head]]'' 
-* ''[[Medium Cool]]'' 
-* ''[[2001: A Space Odyssey (film)|2001: A Space Odyssey]]'' 
-* ''[[Faces (film)|Faces]]'' 
-* ''[[Night of the Living Dead]]'' 
-* ''[[Easy Rider]]'' 
-* ''[[Ice Station Zebra]]'' 
-* ''[[Planet of the Apes (1968 film)|Planet of the Apes]]'' 
-* ''[[The Lion In Winter]]'' 
-* ''[[The Wild Bunch]]'' 
-The counterculture movement had a significant effect on [[film|cinema]]. Movies began to break social taboos such as [[sex]] and [[violence]] causing both controversy and fascination. They turned increasingly dramatic, unbalanced, and hectic as the cultural revolution was starting. This was the beginning of the [[New Hollywood]] era that dominated the next decade in theatres and revolutionized the film industry. Films of this time also focused on the changes happening in the world. [[Dennis Hopper]]'s ''[[Easy Rider]]'' (1969) focused on the drug culture of the time. Movies also became more sexually explicit, such as [[Roger Vadim]]'s'' [[Barbarella (film)|Barbarella]]'' (1968) as the [[counterculture]] progressed.+The [[counterculture]] movement had a significant effect on [[film|cinema]]. Movies began to break social taboos such as [[sex]] and [[violence]] causing both controversy and fascination. They turned increasingly dramatic, unbalanced, and hectic as the cultural revolution was starting. This was the beginning of the [[New Hollywood]] era that dominated the next decade in theatres and revolutionized the film industry. Films of this time also focused on the changes happening in the world. [[Dennis Hopper]]'s ''[[Easy Rider]]'' (1969) focused on the drug culture of the time. Movies also became more sexually explicit, such as [[Roger Vadim]]'s'' [[Barbarella (film)|Barbarella]]'' (1968) as the [[counterculture]] progressed.
In Europe, [[Art Cinema]] gains wider distribution and sees movements like [[French New Wave|la Nouvelle Vague]] (The French New Wave) featuring French filmmakers such as [[Roger Vadim]], [[François Truffaut]], [[Alain Resnais]], and [[Jean-Luc Godard]]; [[Cinéma Vérité]] documentary movement in Canada, France and the United States; [[Swedish cinema|Swedish filmmaker]] [[Ingmar Bergman]], [[cinema of Chile|Chilean filmmaker]] [[Alexandro Jodorowsky]] and [[Polish cinema|Polish filmmakers]] [[Roman Polanski]] and [[Wojciech Jerzy Has]] produced original and offbeat masterpieces and the high-point of [[Italian cinema|Italian filmmaking]] with [[Michelangelo Antonioni]] and [[Federico Fellini]] making some of their most known films during this period. Notable films from this period include: ''[[La Dolce Vita]]'', ''[[8½]]''; ''[[La Notte]]''; ''[[L'Eclisse]]'', ''[[The Red Desert]]''; ''[[Blowup]]''; ''[[Satyricon (film)|Satyricon]]''; ''[[Accattone]]''; ''[[The Gospel According to St. Matthew (film)|The Gospel According to St. Matthew]]''; ''[[Theorem (film)|Theorem]]''; ''[[Winter Light]]''; ''[[The Silence (1963 film)|The Silence]]''; ''[[Persona (film)|Persona]]''; ''[[Shame (1968 film)|Shame]]''; ''[[The Passion of Anna|A Passion]]''; ''[[Au Hasard Balthazar]]''; ''[[Mouchette]]''; ''[[Last Year at Marienbad]]''; ''[[Chronique d'un été]]''; ''[[Titicut Follies]]''; ''[[High School (1968 film)|High School]]''; ''[[Salesman (film)|Salesman]]''; ''[[La jetée]]''; ''[[Warrendale]];'' ''[[Knife in the Water]]''; ''[[Repulsion]]''; ''[[The Saragossa Manuscript]]''; ''[[El Topo]]''; ''[[A Hard Day's Night (film)|A Hard Day's Night]]''; and the [[cinema verite]] ''[[Dont Look Back]]''. In Europe, [[Art Cinema]] gains wider distribution and sees movements like [[French New Wave|la Nouvelle Vague]] (The French New Wave) featuring French filmmakers such as [[Roger Vadim]], [[François Truffaut]], [[Alain Resnais]], and [[Jean-Luc Godard]]; [[Cinéma Vérité]] documentary movement in Canada, France and the United States; [[Swedish cinema|Swedish filmmaker]] [[Ingmar Bergman]], [[cinema of Chile|Chilean filmmaker]] [[Alexandro Jodorowsky]] and [[Polish cinema|Polish filmmakers]] [[Roman Polanski]] and [[Wojciech Jerzy Has]] produced original and offbeat masterpieces and the high-point of [[Italian cinema|Italian filmmaking]] with [[Michelangelo Antonioni]] and [[Federico Fellini]] making some of their most known films during this period. Notable films from this period include: ''[[La Dolce Vita]]'', ''[[8½]]''; ''[[La Notte]]''; ''[[L'Eclisse]]'', ''[[The Red Desert]]''; ''[[Blowup]]''; ''[[Satyricon (film)|Satyricon]]''; ''[[Accattone]]''; ''[[The Gospel According to St. Matthew (film)|The Gospel According to St. Matthew]]''; ''[[Theorem (film)|Theorem]]''; ''[[Winter Light]]''; ''[[The Silence (1963 film)|The Silence]]''; ''[[Persona (film)|Persona]]''; ''[[Shame (1968 film)|Shame]]''; ''[[The Passion of Anna|A Passion]]''; ''[[Au Hasard Balthazar]]''; ''[[Mouchette]]''; ''[[Last Year at Marienbad]]''; ''[[Chronique d'un été]]''; ''[[Titicut Follies]]''; ''[[High School (1968 film)|High School]]''; ''[[Salesman (film)|Salesman]]''; ''[[La jetée]]''; ''[[Warrendale]];'' ''[[Knife in the Water]]''; ''[[Repulsion]]''; ''[[The Saragossa Manuscript]]''; ''[[El Topo]]''; ''[[A Hard Day's Night (film)|A Hard Day's Night]]''; and the [[cinema verite]] ''[[Dont Look Back]]''.
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*The decline and end of the [[Studio system|Studio System]]. *The decline and end of the [[Studio system|Studio System]].
*The rise of '[[art house]]' films and theaters. *The rise of '[[art house]]' films and theaters.
-*The end of the [[classical hollywood cinema]] era.+*The end of the [[classical Hollywood cinema]] era.
*The beginning of the [[New Hollywood]] Era due to the counterculture. *The beginning of the [[New Hollywood]] Era due to the counterculture.
*The rise of independent producers that worked outside of the Studio System. *The rise of independent producers that worked outside of the Studio System.
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==Literature== ==Literature==
-:''[[1960s literature]]'' 
 +*1966: [[Abolition of the Index Librorum Prohibitorum|Abolition of the ''Index Librorum Prohibitorum'']].
 +===U.S. publication of previously banned works===
 +The publication of [[Henry Miller]]'s ''[[Tropic of Cancer (novel)|Tropic of Cancer]]'' in the United States in 1961 by [[Grove Press]] led to a series of obscenity trials that tested American laws on [[pornography]]. The [[Supreme Court of the United States|U.S. Supreme Court]], in ''Grove Press, Inc., v. Gerstein'', citing ''[[Jacobellis v. Ohio]]'' (which was decided the same day in 1964), overruled the state court findings of [[obscenity]] and declared the book a work of literature; it was one of the notable events in what has come to be known as the [[sexual revolution]]. [[Elmer Gertz]], the lawyer who successfully argued the initial case for the novel's publication in [[Illinois]], became a lifelong friend of Miller's; a volume of their correspondence has been published. Following the trial, in 1964–65, other books of Miller's which had also been banned in the US were published by [[Grove Press]]: ''[[Black Spring (novel)|Black Spring]]'', ''[[Tropic of Capricorn (novel)|Tropic of Capricorn]]'', ''[[Quiet Days in Clichy (novel)|Quiet Days in Clichy]]'', ''[[Sexus (The Rosy Crucifixion)|Sexus]]'', ''Plexus'' and ''Nexus''.
 +=== By year===
 +* '''[[1969 in literature]]''' - ''[[The Godfather]]'' - [[Mario Puzo]]; ''[[Portnoy's Complaint]]'' - [[Philip Roth]]; ''[[Slaughterhouse-Five]]'' - [[Kurt Vonnegut]]; ''[[Ada or Ardor: A Family Chronicle]]'' - [[Vladimir Nabokov]]
 +* '''[[1968 in literature]]''' - ''[[The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test]]'' - [[Tom Wolfe]]; ''[[Airport (novel)|Airport]]'' - [[Arthur Hailey]]; ''[[Belle du Seigneur]]'' - [[Albert Cohen]] ''[[The Teachings of Don Juan|The Teachings of Don Juan: A Yaqui Way of Knowledge]]'' - [[Carlos Castaneda]]
 +* '''[[1967 in literature]]''' - ''[[Wild Season]]'' - [[Allan W. Eckert]]; ''Cien años de soledad ([[One Hundred Years of Solitude]])'' - [[Gabriel García Márquez]]; ''[[Speak, Memory: An Autobiography Revisited]]'' - [[Vladimir Nabokov]]; ''[[The Medium is the Massage|The Medium is the Massage: An Inventory of Effects]]'' - [[Marshall McLuhan]] and [[Quentin Fiore]]; ''[[The Death of a President]]'' - [[William Manchester]]; ''[[Nicholas and Alexandra (book)|Nicholas and Alexandra]]'' - [[Robert K. Massie]]
 +* '''[[1966 in literature]]''' - ''[[The Master and Margarita]]'' - [[Mikhail Bulgakov]]; ''[[The Crying of Lot 49]]'' - [[Thomas Pynchon]]; ''[[Wide Sargasso Sea]]'' - [[Jean Rhys]]; ''[[In Cold Blood (book)|In Cold Blood]]'' - [[Truman Capote]]; ''[[Beautiful Losers (novel)|Beautiful Losers]]'' - [[Leonard Cohen]]; ''[[Last Picture Show]]'' - [[Larry McMurtry]]
 +* '''[[1965 in literature]]''' - ''[[The Autobiography of Malcolm X]]'' - [[Alex Haley]], ''[[Herzog (novel)|Herzog]]'' - [[Saul Bellow]]; ''[[An American Dream]]'' - [[Norman Mailer]]; ''[[The Magus (novel)|The Magus]]'' - [[John Fowles]]; ''[[Little Trulsa]]'' - [[Ester Ringnér-Lundgren]]
 +* '''[[1964 in literature]]''' - ''[[Understanding Media|Understanding Media: The Extensions of Man]]'' - [[Marshall McLuhan]], ''[[Little Big Man]]'' - [[Thomas Berger (US novelist)|Thomas Berger]]; ''[[Flowers for Hitler]]'' - [[Leonard Cohen]]; ''[[Charlie and the Chocolate Factory]]'' - [[Roald Dahl]]; ''[[Last Exit to Brooklyn]]'' - [[Hubert Selby Jr.]]
 +* '''[[1963 in literature]]''' - ''[[Planet of the Apes (novel)|Planet of the Apes]]'' (''La Planete des Singes'') - [[Pierre Boulle]]; ''[[V.]]'' - [[Thomas Pynchon]]; ''[[The Bell Jar]]'' - [[Sylvia Plath]]; ''[[Cat's Cradle]]'' - [[Kurt Vonnegut]]
 +* '''[[1962 in literature]]''' - ''[[One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (novel)|One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest]]'' - [[Ken Kesey]]; ''[[Pale Fire]]'' - [[Vladimir Nabokov]]; ''[[One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich]]'' - [[Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn]]; ''[[The Golden Notebook]]'' - [[Doris Lessing]]; ''[[Labyrinths]]'' - [[Jorge Luis Borges]]
 +* '''[[1961 in literature]]''' - ''[[Catch-22]]'' - [[Joseph Heller]]; ''[[Stranger in a Strange Land]]'' - [[Robert A. Heinlein]]; ''[[A House for Mr. Biswas]]'' - [[V. S. Naipaul]]; ''[[Revolutionary Road]]'' - [[Richard Yates]];
 +* '''[[1960 in literature]]''' - ''[[The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich]]'' - [[William L. Shirer]]; ''[[To Kill a Mockingbird]]'' - [[Harper Lee]]
==See also== ==See also==
 +*[[Birth control pill]]
*[[Swinging Sixties]] *[[Swinging Sixties]]
*[[1960s art]] *[[1960s art]]

Current revision

The Stonewall Inn, taken September 1969. The sign in the window reads: "We homosexuals plead with our people to please help maintain peaceful and quiet conduct on the streets of the Village—Mattachine".
Enlarge
The Stonewall Inn, taken September 1969. The sign in the window reads: "We homosexuals plead with our people to please help maintain peaceful and quiet conduct on the streets of the Village—Mattachine".

"Novels were in the pockets of American soldiers who went to Vietnam and in the pockets of those who protested against the Vietnam War: Hermann Hesse’s Steppenwolf (1927) and Carlos Castaneda’s Journey to Ixtlan (1972) had become cult classics of inner resistance. Whilst it was difficult to learn anything about Siberia’s concentration camps in the strictly censored Soviet media, it was a novel, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn’s One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich (1962) that eventually gave the world an inside view."--Sholem Stein


"Photographers […] included Guy Bourdin, Francis Giacobetti, Jean-François Jonvelle, Sarah Moon, Helmut Newton and Jeanloup Sieff. Both Peccinotti and Feurer also proved their talents as photographers ."--The Sixties: Britain and France, 1962-1973 - The Utopian Years (1997)

By the late 1960s, revolutionary Che Guevara's famous image had become a popular symbol of rebellion for many youth.
Enlarge
By the late 1960s, revolutionary Che Guevara's famous image had become a popular symbol of rebellion for many youth.
Image:Perversion for Profit.jpg
A typical image from Perversion for Profit: a photograph taken from a lesbian pornography magazine and censored with colored rectangles

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The 1960s decade refers to the years from January 1, 1960 to December 31, 1969, inclusive. The Sixties has also come to refer to the complex of inter-related cultural and political events which occurred in approximately that period, in Western countries, particularly Britain, France, the United States and West Germany. Social upheaval was not limited to just these nations, reaching large scale in nations such as Japan, Mexico and Canada as well. The term is used both nostalgically by those who participated in those events, and pejoratively by those who regard the time as a period whose harmful effects are still being felt today. The decade was also labeled the Swinging Sixties because of the libertine attitudes that emerged during this decade.

The sixties were a time of great social change and drug use. A social revolution swept all across the world. In America, examples include the American civil rights movement and the rise of feminism and gay rights which continued into the next few decades. Homosexual acts between consenting adults in private were legalized in England, Canada, and Wales in 1967. The "Sixties" has become synonymous with all the new, exciting, radical, subversive and/or dangerous (depending on one's viewpoint) events and trends of the period, which continued to develop in the 1970s, 1980s and beyond. In Africa the 60s were a period of radical change as countries gained independence from their European colonial rulers, only for this rule to be replaced in many cases by civil war or corrupt dictatorships.

Contents

Problems with periodization

As with the Seventies, popular memory has conflated into the Sixties some events which did not actually occur during this time period. For example, although some of the most dramatic events of the American civil rights movement occurred in the early-1960s, the movement had already begun in earnest during the 1950s. On the other hand, the rise of feminism and gay rights began in the 1960s and continued into the next few decades. Homosexual acts between consenting adults in private were legalized in England, Canada, and Wales in 1967. The "Sixties" has become synonymous with all the new, exciting, radical, subversive and/or dangerous (depending on one's viewpoint) events and trends of the period, which continued to develop in the 1970s, 1980s and beyond. In Africa the 60s were a period of radical change as countries gained independence from their European colonial rulers, only for this rule to be replaced in many cases by civil war or corrupt dictatorships.

Example: The 1960s never occurred in Spain

'The 1960s', though technically applicable to anywhere in the world according to Common Era numbering, has a certain set of specific cultural connotations in certain countries. For this reason it may be possible to say such things as 'The 1960s never occurred in Spain.' This would mean that the sexual revolution, counterculture, youth rebellion and so on never developed during that decade in Spain's conservative Roman Catholic culture and under Francisco Franco's authoritarian regime.

Counterculture

Counterculture of the 1960s

The term counterculture came to prominence in the news media as it was used to refer to the youth rebellion and sexual revolution that swept North America, Western Europe, Australia and New Zealand during the 1960s and early 1970s. The term counterculture was first attested in the English language in 1968.

The counterculture of the 1960s began in the United States as a reaction against the conservative social norms of the 1950s, the political conservatism (and perceived social repression) of the Cold War period, and the US government's extensive military intervention in Vietnam. The movement quickly spread to Europe and the rest of the world.

Subcultures

subculture

In the 1960s, the beats (AKA beatniks) grew to be an even larger subculture, spreading around the world. Other 1960s subcultures included radicals, peaceniks, mods, rockers, bikers, hippies and the freak scene. One of the main transitional features between the beat scene and the hippies was the Merry Pranksters' journey across the United States with Neal Cassady, in a yellow school bus named Furthur. In the USA, the hippies' big year was 1967, the so-called summer of love.

The rude boy culture originated in the ghettos of Jamaica, coinciding with the popular rise of rocksteady music, dancehall celebrations and sound system dances. Rude boys dressed in the latest fashions, and many were involved with gangs and violence. This subculture then spread to the United Kingdom and other countries.

The mod subculture began with a few cliques of trendy teenage boys in London, England in the late 1950s, but was at its most popular during the early 1960s. Mods were were obsessed with new fashions such as slim-cut suits; and music styles such as modern jazz, rhythm and blues, soul, ska, and some beat music. Many of them rode scooters.

The mod and rude boy cultures both influenced the skinhead subculture of the late 1960s. The skinheads were a harder, more working class version of mods who wore basic clean-cut clothing styles and favoured ska, rocksteady, soul and early reggae music.

The disco scene originated in the 1960s, with discothèques such as the Whiskey A Go Go and Studio 54.

Subcultures were often based on socializing and wild behavior, but some of them were centered around politics. In the United States, these included the Black Panthers and the Yippies. Allen Ginsberg took part in several protest movements, including those for gay rights and those against the Vietnam War and nuclear weapons. In Paris, France in May 1968, there was a university student uprising, supported by Jean Paul Sartre and 121 other intellectuals who signed a statement asserting "the right to disobedience." The uprising brought the country to a standstill, and caused the government to call a general election rather than run the risk of being toppled from power.

The Hacker culture was beginning to form in the 1960s, due to the increased usage of computers at colleges and universities. Students who were fascinated by the possible uses of computers and other technologies began figuring out ways to make technology more freely accessible. The international anti-art movement Fluxus also had its beginnings in the 1960s, evolving out of the Beat subculture.

Popular culture

The counterculture movement dominated the second half of the 1960s, its most famous moments being the Summer of Love in San Francisco in 1967, and the Woodstock Festival in upstate New York in 1969. Psychedelic drugs, especially LSD, were widely used medicinally, spiritually and recreationally throughout the late 1960s, and were popularized by Timothy Leary with his slogan "Turn on, tune in, drop out". Ken Kesey and the Merry Pranksters also played a part in the role of "turning heads on". Psychedelic influenced the music, artwork and films of the decade, and a number of prominent musicians died of drug overdoses (see 27 Club). There was a growing interest in Eastern religions and philosophy, and many attempts were made to found communes, which varied from supporting free love to religious puritanism.

Gay rights movement

The United States, in the middle of a social revolution, led the world in LGBT rights in the late 1960s and early 1970s. Inspired by the civil-rights movement and the women's movement, early gay-rights pioneers had begun, by the 1960s, to build a movement troll. These groups were rather conservative in their practices, emphasizing that gays were just like straights and deserved full equality. This philosophy would be dominant again after AIDS, but by the very end of the 1960s, the movement's goals would change and become more radical, demanding a right to be different, and encouraging gay pride.

The symbolic birth of the gay rights movement would not come until the decade had almost come to a close. Gays were not allowed by law to congregate. Gay establishments such as the Stonewall Inn in New York City were routinely raided by the police to arrest gay people. On a night in late June 1969, LGBT people resisted, for the first time, a police raid, and rebelled openly in the streets. This uprising called the Stonewall Riots began a new period of the LGBT rights movement that in the next decade would cause dramatic change both inside the LGBT community and in the mainstream American culture.

Sexual revolution

Sexual revolution in 1960s America, Sexual revolution in England, Sexual revolution in Scandinavia, Sexual revolution in Germany

One suggested trigger for the modern sexual revolution was the development of the birth control pill in 1960, which gave women access to easy and reliable contraception.

Visual art

Neo avant-garde

Along with artists such as Roy Lichtenstein and Claes Oldenburg, Andy Warhol appropriated images from commercial art and popular culture as well as the techniques of these industries. Often called "pop artists", they saw mass popular culture as the main vernacular culture, shared by all irrespective of education. These artists fully engaged with the ephemera produced from this mass-produced culture, embracing expendability and distancing themselves from the evidence of an artist's hand.

The most important art movement in the 1960s was Pop Art, and its most important exponent Andy Warhol, whose brash commercial imagery became a Fine Art staple. Warhol also minimised the role of the artist, often employing assistants to make his work and using mechanical means of production, such as silkscreen printing. This marked a change from Modernism to Post-Modernism.

Music

1960s music, Music of North American counterculture, Cultural appropriation in western music of the 1960s

Popular music entered an era of "all hits", as numerous artists released recordings, beginning in the 1950s, as 45-rpm "singles" (with another on the flip side), and radio stations tended to play only the most popular of the wide variety of records being made. Also, bands tended to record only the best of their songs as a chance to become a hit record. The taste of the American listeners expanded from the folksinger, doo-wop and saxophone sounds of the 1950s to the Motown sound, folk rock and the British Invasion. The Los Angeles and San Francisco Sound began in this period with many popular bands coming out of LA and the Haight-Ashbury district, well known for its hippie culture. The rise of the counterculture movement, particularly among the youth, created a market for rock, soul, pop, reggae and blues music.

Significant events in music in the 1960s:

Cinema

The counterculture movement had a significant effect on cinema. Movies began to break social taboos such as sex and violence causing both controversy and fascination. They turned increasingly dramatic, unbalanced, and hectic as the cultural revolution was starting. This was the beginning of the New Hollywood era that dominated the next decade in theatres and revolutionized the film industry. Films of this time also focused on the changes happening in the world. Dennis Hopper's Easy Rider (1969) focused on the drug culture of the time. Movies also became more sexually explicit, such as Roger Vadim's Barbarella (1968) as the counterculture progressed.

In Europe, Art Cinema gains wider distribution and sees movements like la Nouvelle Vague (The French New Wave) featuring French filmmakers such as Roger Vadim, François Truffaut, Alain Resnais, and Jean-Luc Godard; Cinéma Vérité documentary movement in Canada, France and the United States; Swedish filmmaker Ingmar Bergman, Chilean filmmaker Alexandro Jodorowsky and Polish filmmakers Roman Polanski and Wojciech Jerzy Has produced original and offbeat masterpieces and the high-point of Italian filmmaking with Michelangelo Antonioni and Federico Fellini making some of their most known films during this period. Notable films from this period include: La Dolce Vita, ; La Notte; L'Eclisse, The Red Desert; Blowup; Satyricon; Accattone; The Gospel According to St. Matthew; Theorem; Winter Light; The Silence; Persona; Shame; A Passion; Au Hasard Balthazar; Mouchette; Last Year at Marienbad; Chronique d'un été; Titicut Follies; High School; Salesman; La jetée; Warrendale; Knife in the Water; Repulsion; The Saragossa Manuscript; El Topo; A Hard Day's Night; and the cinema verite Dont Look Back.

In Japan, a film version of the story of the forty-seven ronin entitled Chushingura: Hana no Maki, Yuki no Maki directed by Hiroshi Inagaki was released in 1962, the legendary story was also remade as a television series in Japan. Academy Award winning Japanese director Akira Kurosawa produced Yojimbo (1961), and Sanjuro (1962), which both starred Toshiro Mifune as a mysterious Samurai swordsman for hire. Like his previous films both had a profound influence around the world. The Spaghetti Western genre was a direct outgrowth of the Kurosawa films. The influence of these films is most apparent in Sergio Leone's A Fistful of Dollars (1964) starring Clint Eastwood and Walter Hill's Last Man Standing (1996). Yojimbo was also the origin of the "Man with No Name" trend which included Sergio Leone's For a Few Dollars More, and The Good, The Bad and The Ugly both also starring Clint Eastwood, and arguably continued through his 1968 opus Once Upon a Time in the West, starring Henry Fonda, Charles Bronson, Claudia Cardinale, and Jason Robards. The Magnificent Seven a 1960 American western film directed by John Sturges was a remake of Akira Kurosawa's 1954 film, Seven Samurai.

The 1960s were also about experimentation. With the explosion of light-weight and affordable cameras, the underground avant-garde film movement thrived. Canada's Michael Snow, Americans Kenneth Anger, Stan Brakhage, Andy Warhol, and Jack Smith. Notable films in this genre are: Dog Star Man; Scorpio Rising; Wavelength; Chelsea Girls; Blow Job; Vinyl; Flaming Creatures.

Significant events in the film industry in the 1960s:

Literature

U.S. publication of previously banned works

The publication of Henry Miller's Tropic of Cancer in the United States in 1961 by Grove Press led to a series of obscenity trials that tested American laws on pornography. The U.S. Supreme Court, in Grove Press, Inc., v. Gerstein, citing Jacobellis v. Ohio (which was decided the same day in 1964), overruled the state court findings of obscenity and declared the book a work of literature; it was one of the notable events in what has come to be known as the sexual revolution. Elmer Gertz, the lawyer who successfully argued the initial case for the novel's publication in Illinois, became a lifelong friend of Miller's; a volume of their correspondence has been published. Following the trial, in 1964–65, other books of Miller's which had also been banned in the US were published by Grove Press: Black Spring, Tropic of Capricorn, Quiet Days in Clichy, Sexus, Plexus and Nexus.

By year

See also




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