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Give Me Liberty!: An American history Chapter 25 The Sixties, 1960–1968

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Page 1: Foner lecture ch25

Give Me Liberty!:An American history

Chapter 25The Sixties,1960–1968

Page 2: Foner lecture ch25

The Freedom Movement

• The Rising Tide of Protest

(Above R) Participants in a sit-in in Raleigh, NC; (R) Civil rights demonstrators in Orangeburg, South Carolina, in 1960; (Above L) Civil rights demonstrators.

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The Freedom

Movement• Birmingham• The March on

Washington

(Above) A fireman assaulting young African-American demonstrators with a high-pressure hose during the climactic demonstrations in Birmingham, AL, which were broadcast on live TV; (L) Part of the crowd that gathered at the Lincoln Memorial during the 1963 March on Washington.

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The Kennedy Years

• Kennedy and the World

(Above) A Saturn V rocket launches Apollo 11 in 1969; (L) U-2 reconnaissance photograph of Soviet nuclear missiles in Cuba. Missile transports and tents for fueling and maintenance are visible.

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The Kennedy Years

• The Missile Crisis• Kennedy and Civil

Rights

(Above R) Lyndon B. Johnson being sworn in aboard Air Force One after the Kennedy assassination; (L) Reading the news of President Kennedy’s assassination.

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Lyndon Johnson’s

Presidency

• The Civil Rights Act of 1964

• Freedom Summer

(Above R) Fannie Lou Hamer testifying about civil and voting rights discrimination; (L) Young activists from all racial backgrounds pushed for civil rights during the Freedom Summer bus tour.

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Lyndon Johnson’s

Presidency• The 1964 Election• The Conservative

Sixties

(Above) Map 25.1 The Presidential Election of 1964; (L) A 1967 rally by members of Young Americans for Freedom, a conservative group that flourished in the 1960s.

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Lyndon Johnson’s

Presidency• The Voting Rights Act• Immigration Reform

(Above) A white native of Selma, AL offers her support to civil rights demonstrators; (L) President Johnson shakes Dr. King’s hand after signing the Voting Rights Act of 1964.

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Lyndon Johnson’s

Presidency• The Great Society• The War on Poverty

(Above) Figure 25.1 Percentage of Population Below Poverty Level, by Race, 1959–1969*; (L) President Lyndon Johnson visited Appalachia as part of the War on Poverty.

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The Changing Black

Movement• Freedom and

Equality• The Ghetto

Uprisings

(Above) A burned store in Los Angeles during the 1965 riots; (L) Striking sanitation workers.

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Vietnam and the New Left• Old and New Lefts• The Fading Consensus• The Rise of Students

for a Democratic Society (SDS)

(Above) Members of Students for a Democratic Society (SDS); (L) Police arresting Mario Savio, a leader of the Berkeley Free Speech movement.

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Vietnam and the

New Left• American and

Vietnam

(Above R) Map 25.2 The Vietnam War, 1964-1975; (L) The war in Vietnam under discussion at a Cabinet meeting.

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Vietnam and the

New Left• Lyndon

Johnson’s War

(Above R) American soldiers in South Vietnam carrying wounded men; (L) (Above) A massive 1969 antiwar demonstration.

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Vietnam and the New Left

• The Antiwar Movement• The Counterculture• Personal Liberation and the

Free Individual

(R) A poster listing some of the performers at Woodstock; (Center) Two young members of the counterculture at their wedding in New Mexico; (L) Timothy Leary, a promoter of hallucinogenic LSD, listening to a band.

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The New Movements and the Rights

Revolution• The Feminine Mystique• Women’s Liberation

(Above) A 1970 women’s liberation demonstration at the Statue of Liberty; (L) A race official tries to eject Kathrine Switzer fromthe Boston Marathon as male runners intervene.

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The New Movements

and the Rights

Revolution

• Personal Freedom• Gay Liberation

(Above) Part of the Gay Liberation Day demonstration after the Stonewall riots; (L) Marchers protest the lack of rights for gay Americans.

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The New Movements and the Rights Revolution

• Latino Activism• Red Power

(Above) César Chavez speaking for Latino rights at a rally; (L) The occupation of Alcatraz Island in San Francisco Bay in 1969 by “Indians of All Tribes” symbolized the emergence of a new militancy among Native Americans.

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The New Movements

and the Rights

Revolution

• Silent Spring• The New

Environmentalism

(Above R) Author Rachel Carson and her book Silent Spring; (L) The book raised awareness of environmental issues.

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The New Movements and the Rights

Revolution

• The Rights Revolution• Policing the States• The Right to Privacy(Above) Karl Hubenthal’s December 8,

1976, cartoon highlights American civil rights; (L) Female students on a college campus.

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1968

• A Year of Turmoil

• The Global 1968

(Above) Television brought the Vietnam War into American homes in a new and immediate way; (L) A mural in Belfast, Northern Ireland highlights the global impact of the American civil rights debates.

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1968

• Nixon’s Comeback• The Legacy of the

Sixties(Above R) Map 25.3 The Presidential Election of 1968; (L) Signs, a 1970 painting by Robert Rauschenberg.