The Hippie Subculture

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The Hippie Movement: The Philosophy behind the Counterculture

The sixties was a decade of liberation and revolution, a time of great change and exciting exploration for the generations to come. It was a time of anti-war protests, free love, sit-ins, naked hippie chicks and mind-altering drugs. In big cities such as San Francisco, Los Angeles, New York and Paris, there was a passionate exchange of ideas, fiery protests against the Vietnam War, and a time for love, peace and equality. The coming together of like-minded people from around the world was spontaneous and unstoppable. This group of people, which included writers, musicians, thinkers and tokers, came to be known as the popular counterculture, better known as hippies. The dawning of the Age of Aquarius in the late sixties was more than just a musical orgy. It was a time of spiritual missions to fight for change and everything they believed in. Freedom, love, justice, equality and peace were at the very forefront of this movement (West, 2008). Some wore beads. Some had long hair. Some wore tie-dye and others wore turtle-neck sweaters. The Hippie generation was a wild bunch, to say the least, that opened the cookie jar of possibilities politically, sexually, spiritually and socially to forever be known as one of the most memorable social movements of all time (Hippie Generation, 2003).

Researchers classify social movements according to the type of change they seek (Aberle, 1966, Cameron, 1966, Blumer, 1969, as cited in Macionis, 2007). According to John Macionis, a social movement is when people commonly band together to create an organized activity that encourages or discourages social change (Macionis, 2008). In the case of this radical society, Hippies were typically ...

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...evolution was the change of thinking in society. They challenged the established authorities and conventions which resulted in transforming the lives of thousands. The hippies created an ongoing social movement and continue fighting for the freedom that “ordinary” people are afraid to question.

References

(2003). Hippie Generation. Knowledge Rush, Retrieved 03-17-2009, from http://www.knowledgerush.com/kr/encyclopedia/Hippie_generation/

(2008). Activism. Hippy Land, Retrieved 03-18-09, from http://www.hippy.com/php/sitetopics.php?topic=9

Macionis, John (2007). Society the Basics. Upper Saddle River, New Jersey: Pearson Prentice Hall.

West, Maggie (2008). The Hippie Subculture. Helium, Retrieved 03-17-2009, from http://www.helium.com/items/1308069-the-sixties-seventies-beatniks-hippies-and-the-vietnam-war

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