Class Of '66: Living in Suburban Middle AmericaTemple University Press, 18 juin 2010 - 288 pages In the midst of the Vietnam war, sit-ins, counter-culture, and campus rallies, the 1966 graduating class of a South New Jersey coast high school came of age on the margins of political and cultural upheaval. Rather than presenting the stereotype of Sixties youth scene, this study reveals this group to be conservative teenagers shaped by mainstream loyalties to God, Country, and Family. These "Coasters"—white, middle-class, suburban baby-boomers—were spectators of rather than participants in the decade's activism. Yet, even as they were missed by the powerful currents of the times, their lives were touched by those currents more than is suggested by the stereotype of Richard Nixon's "Silent Majority." Paul Lyons interviewed 47 members of the class of 1966, recording recollections of their school days, politics, work, family life, community, and expectations for future careers and family. Each chapter is complemented by personal profiles of individual "Coasters." Removed from both the urban experience and that of the elite suburbs, these teenagers disprove popular cultural assumptions that all baby boomers, with few exceptions, went to Woodstock, protested against the Vietnam War, engaged in drug experimentation, or joined the hippie counter-culture. Instead, Lyons' study explores how their then relative ambivalence to political and cultural rebellion did not preclude many "Coasters" from indirectly incorporating over the years certain core Sixties values on issues of race, gender, mobility, and patriotism. |
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... look back on it , I didn't put the energy into it ; if I had , I would have been a very successful student . It was just that I could get by with Cs and Bs and be fine . " He chose not to focus on the industrial arts classes , because ...
... look back on it , I didn't put the energy into it ; if I had , I would have been a very successful student . It was just that I could get by with Cs and Bs and be fine . " He chose not to focus on the industrial arts classes , because ...
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... look at it and know just what to do ; I had that ability , always did . " He was " constantly doing things , making ... look down on the prom rather than look up , given the ceiling in the gym , " he recalls . " So the idea that came out ...
... look at it and know just what to do ; I had that ability , always did . " He was " constantly doing things , making ... look down on the prom rather than look up , given the ceiling in the gym , " he recalls . " So the idea that came out ...
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Table des matières
1 | |
7 | |
40 | |
3 Vietnam | 72 |
4 The Sixties | 103 |
5 White on Black | 123 |
6 Growing Up Female | 163 |
7 Career Family Community | 202 |
Conclusion | 218 |
Methodological Appendix | 247 |
Notes | 253 |
Bibliography | 263 |
Index | 269 |
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1966 graduates activists activities adds adolescent affluent antiwar Atlantic City Atlantic County baby-boom Barbara Ehrenreich behaviors Bill Green Billie Bobby Green campus career casino Channing civil rights classmates Coast baby boomers Coast graduates Coast towns Coastal High School Coasters counterculture culture divorce drugs environment experience father feel felt Frank Feller friends George Wallace girls grew guys Harry Kearns hippie husband interviewed Jack Claire Jersey Joey Campion kids knew Linda Duncan lives mainstream marriage married Melanie middle-class mother never Nora Pam Baird Lane parents percent play Pleasantville political preppies protest racial radical rebellion recalls remember Republican Rodney Wayne rowdies Sally Sally Rogers Sixties social social-class South Bay suburban talk teacher tells there's things thought tion Vicki Vietnam Vietnam War voted Wilbur women World War II York youth yuppies