The Times They Were a-Changin': 1964, the Year the Sixties Arrived and the Battle Lines of Today Were Drawn

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UPC:
9781950994106
Maximum Purchase:
2 units
Binding:
Hardcover
Publication Date:
6/7/2022
Release Date:
6/7/2022
Author:
McElvaine, Robert S
Language:
English: Published; English: Original Language; English
Pages:
480
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An award-winning historian on the transformative year in the sixties that continues to reverberate in our lives and politicsfor readers of Heather Cox Richardson. If 1968 marked a turning point in a pivotal decade, 1964or rather, the long 1964, from JFKs assassination in November 1963 to mid-1965was the time when the sixties truly arrived. It was then that the United States began a radical shift toward a much more inclusive definition of American, with a greater degree of equality and a government actively involved in social and economic improvement. It was a radical shift accompanied by a cultural revolution. The same month Bob Dylan released his iconic ballad The Times They Are a-Changin, January 1964, President Lyndon Johnson announced his War on Poverty. Spurred by the civil rights movement and a generation pushing for change, the Civil Rights Act, the Voting Rights Act, and the Immigration and Nationality Act were passed during this period. This was a time of competing definitions of freedom. Freedom from racism, freedom from poverty. White youth sought freedoms they associated with black culture, captured imperfectly in the phrase sex, drugs, and rock n roll. Along with freedom from racist oppression, black Americans sought the opportunities associated with the white middle class: white freedom. Women challenged rigid gender roles. And in response to these freedoms, the changing mores, and youth culture, the contrary impulse found political expression in such figures as Barry Goldwater and Ronald Reagan, proponents of what was presented as freedom from government interference. Meanwhile, a nonevent in the Tonkin Gulf would accelerate the nation's plunge into the Vietnam tragedy. In narrating 1964s moment of reckoning, when American identity began to be reimagined, McElvaine ties those past battles to their legacy today. Throughout, he captures the changing consciousness of the period through its vibrant music, film, literature, and personalities.