RobertBuzzanco-TheStruggleForAmerica-NunnMcginty(2019)
A New Kind of Democracy? Political and Cultural Developments in the 1960s 427 Rubin’s experiences might not have been widespread ...
428 ChaPter^8 “Women’s Liberation” described that more militant approach, and it grew out of the Civil Rights and New Left movem ...
A New Kind of Democracy? Political and Cultural Developments in the 1960s 429 and men within the organization were furious, refu ...
430 ChaPter^8 traditionally considered “men’s work.” They demanded equal pay for equal work. They sought employment in tradition ...
A New Kind of Democracy? Political and Cultural Developments in the 1960s 431 ideas like “the personal is political”—meaning tha ...
432 ChaPter^8 Backs and, later, Ms. Magazine appeared, while feminists such as Gloria Steinem, Angela Davis, Germaine Greer, Rob ...
A New Kind of Democracy? Political and Cultural Developments in the 1960s 433 that nearly one-fourth of American women had an ab ...
434 ChaPter^8 sweeps to rid neighborhoods, bars and beaches of people accused of being gay. Some areas prohibited people from we ...
A New Kind of Democracy? Political and Cultural Developments in the 1960s 435 showed up weekly to collect a cash payoff since th ...
436 ChaPter^8 violence. Today, when gay couples in those 20 states apply for marriage licenses, it is not an exaggeration to say ...
A New Kind of Democracy? Political and Cultural Developments in the 1960s 437 to child labor. The big farm owners, not surprisin ...
438 ChaPter^8 abstract impressionism and dissent like videos, posters, and “guerrilla” perfor- mance, which were spontaneous pub ...
A New Kind of Democracy? Political and Cultural Developments in the 1960s 439 Vietnam War. In Los Angeles, artists including Roy ...
440 ChaPter^8 the audience during a talk in 1968 in Britain by coming out wearing farmers’ overalls and dressing and undressing ...
A New Kind of Democracy? Political and Cultural Developments in the 1960s 441 nomic, political, and social rights. For instance, ...
442 ChaPter^8 issues—participatory democracy, racial justice, women’s rights—to oppose the U.S. intervention in Vietnam. But the ...
443 c haPter 9 Vietnam, Protest, and Counterculture O n 2 September 1945, Ho Chi Minh spoke before a half million Vietnamese in ...
444 ChaPter^9 about France returning to Vietnam. Europe was the most important area and the Americans wanted the French to focus ...
Vietnam, Protest, and Counterculture 445 4.6 million tons of bombs on Vietnam and another 2 million tons on Cambodia and Laos. A ...
446 ChaPter^9 government accepted the concept of private property and did not proclaim the establishment of a Communist society. ...
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