1960s Turbulence: Youth, Warfare, and Civil Movements

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During the turbulent era of the 1960s, youth excelled boundaries and expectations to adequately improve the world. Throughout this time, many individuals were trying to juggle the conflicts between racism, sexism, and the turning point in the Vietnam War, the Tet Offensive. This battle occurred in 1968, and was a watershed moment in the Vietnam War that ultimately turned many Americans against bloodshed. “The total casualties – dead, wounded, and missing in action – had grown from 2,500 in 1965 and would top 80,000 by the end of 1967” (Willbanks 6). Destruction from the poignant fighting convinced rising numbers of Americans that the expense of United States’ commitment was too immense. The Anti-War movement gained momentum as student …show more content…

Initially, Woodstock was simply going to be a concert for people to attend and enjoy, free of repression and the outside war zones. Unexpectedly, an estimated 500,000 people were at the gates waiting two days before the concert even started (Evans 65). Woodstock was not anticipated to have such an infinite amount of people, but once word spread about the serene music extravaganza, it would be impossible to miss out. The majority of the people attending, were present those three days to protest the gruesome effects caused by war. Many people wanted to revolt against the Vietnam War and racial tension vastly developing across the nation (64). Once the festival began, all of the attendees realized that they united for the same message of openness, peace, and cultural expression that could not be asserted anywhere else. “This new counterculture suggested a new model for an alternative society which many felt would be synthesized and expressed most completely at the three days of peace and music that was to be at the Woodstock festival” (14). Woodstock was no longer solely for entertainment, but transformed into a defining moment when American youth and music had the power to influence the way the nation and the world was …show more content…

This three-day festival gave voice to some of the worst fears and deepest concerns from the Vietnam War, particularly the Tet Offensive. Since this was the first televised war, it only deepened the uneasiness; this war carried out into dinner tables, living rooms, and bedrooms. Parents and children witnessed the broken bodies in body bags, explosions, and Napalm bursting through the air (Corry). Many student uproars broke out for freedom and protest against social evils. However, most of the protests did not have a strong enough voice to impact the world. Woodstock had later become the strongest advocacy that embodied antiwar campaigns and freedom guided by the youth. Isabel Stein, a Woodstock attendee

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