American society and culture experienced awakening due to various civil rights, economic and political problems in the 1960 's. At the heart of this revolution is the American hippie, the most distinctive and influential person at the time. Hippie is important for the anti-culture of the United States, it is a driving force to raise awareness and enhance recognized value. Hippie's solution to institutionalized American social problems is to participate in group protests with other lifestyles and extreme beliefs or to withdraw completely from society.
The average hippie is from 15 to 25 years old. Most of them are Caucasian, middle class Americans who think they are misunderstood by society. All hippies are different, but most of them do not have work, unless absolutely, they do not go to church, they are free to participate in sex activities. Despite the hippie group's differences, they are all about promoting peace. They are known for opposing the US participation in the Vietnam War and they also helped launch the civil rights movement. Musical performances, calm sitting, gatherings, street plays are just a few ways for hippies to express their opinions.
W.R.: "American Hippies" is a brief overview of how the anti-culture of the 1960's changed American society and its culture. These changes include narcotics, gender, rock music, but they have proved to be more advanced, including natural foods and more relaxed parenting methods. Two excellent personal memoirs are "Huerfano" by Roberta Price and "Sleeping in My Place" by Peter Coyote.
In the 1960s and 1970s, Hippie was also a member of the hippie, opposed to the counter culture movement that refused the mainstream American life. The campaign began on the campus of the American university, but also spread to other countries including Canada and the UK. This name is the name of "hip" (Allen Ginsberg, Jack Kerouac etc) used in the beat of the 1950s, and is often considered as the predecessor of Hippie. Part of this movement was due to America's involvement in the Vietnam War (1955-75), but Hippies often participated directly in politics rather than their activists are known as "Yippies" (Youth International Party) There was not.
In many ways, the hippies of the 1960 's came from the early American antisocial, a lost generation. This group of young bohemists, including Jack Kerorock, Alan Ginsberg, William S. Vallace, refused general social norms in the 1940s and 1950s. , Capitalism, consumerism, materialism. Focusing on Bohemian Haven in San Francisco and the East End in New York, Beat has taken Oriental religion and is experimenting with drugs and loose sex; their supporters are called narrow words of "beatnik".