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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 6 page paper on how the 1960s led to the separatism of the 1990s. The writer proves, through historical, socioeconomic and political perspectives that 'the revolutionaries of the 1960s are still stranded on the edge of the abyss and scrambling for ways to keep their children from falling in. One or more leaders today haven't the charisma or opportunity, due to media castration, to lead them. Leadership is coming in the form of separatism into various cultures. Just as they were then, the boomers are stuck looking for identity in separatism, and also as they were then, they are the leaders of that revolution.' Bibliography lists 14 sources.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_60s.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
words of the leaders of that generation, John Fitzgerald Kennedy (Kennedy 1961), Robert Francis Kennedy (Kennedy 1966) and Martin Luther King, Jr. (King 1963; Ravitch 1990) were snuffed out.
Not one, but all three of these leaders were gone and replaced by conservative Democrats and Republicans. At first in despondency, and then in fervor, the baby boomers latched
onto a new God--money. Obviously, the issue is complex and there were many other influences, but only around 1990 has there
been a reduction in demand for goods and services (Masnick; Kim 1995), and a turning to "higher" ideals. However, these ideals are not necessarily blanketed in the original call
of individual responsibility as it relates the whole--leaders are calling for separatism. The call to separatism in the 1960s is interwoven to the
separatist claims of today, but it has a different face. Yesterday, starting with beatniks and a young president, separation was an issue of age and intellectualization, not one of
melting pot and religious culture as it is today. Yesterday, separation for African Americans was one of justice, not one of identity as it is today. Because the
issue is complex, all of the separatist issues since the 1950s are in effect. These include: the Donna Reed syndrome (50s), freedom of individuality and sexual freedom (60s), freedom
of blacks and other minorities (50s-90s), freedom of non-participation (70s), freedom to become rich and famous (80s), and the freedom to co-mingle and separate into cultures (80s and 90s).
It is claimed that one of the largest influences on the young generation in the 1960s was the call to action by these leaders
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