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Summary extra credit unit 2.edited.docx Hist -1302 Hist - Section A In the sixties, the youth practiced counterculture. They did this as a form of rebellion; their practices oppose those of the established community. There are two sides to it. Some$7.49
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Summary extra credit unit 2.edited.docx Hist -1302 Hist - Section A In the sixties, the youth practiced counterculture. They did this as a form of rebellion; their practices oppose those of the established community. There are two sides to it. Some
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extra credit unit Hist -1302 Hist - Section A In the sixties, the youth practiced counterculture. They did this as a form of rebellion; their practices oppose those of the established community. There are two sides to it. Some used it to rebel against freedoms and rights being deprived, such...
extra credit unit 2editeddocx hist 1302 hist 1302 82001 section a in the sixties
the youth practiced counterculture they did this as a form of rebellion their practices oppose those of the
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Hist -1302
Hist -1302-82001
Section A
In the sixties, the youth practiced counterculture. They did this as a form of rebellion;
their practices oppose those of the established community. There are two sides to it. Some used
it to rebel against freedoms and rights being deprived, such as freedom of speech, racial equality,
and women's rights. Others used this platform to rebel against all norms observed by their
parents; drug abuse, indecency, violence, and freedom. This was important because minor groups
in the society needed a platform so that their voices could be heard. Groups that benefited from
the counterculture include the youth and university students who were now able to be heard,
women were given their rights to earn equal wages at workplaces, the African-Americans were
given their civil rights when the civil rights bill had been passed, and the Native Indians were
able to get support in sustaining their agricultural practices (grapes boycotts) among other rights
such as education and equal working opportunities.
Work cited
Braunstein, Peter, and Michael William Doyle, eds. Imagine Nation: The American
Counterculture of the 1960s and'70s. Psychology Press, 2002. Braunstein, Peter, and Michael
William Doyle, eds. Imagine Nation: The American Counterculture of the 1960s and'70s.
Psychology Press, 2002.
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