Kids Library Home

Welcome to the Kids' Library!

Search for books, movies, music, magazines, and more.

     
Available items only
Record 39 of 68
Previous Record Next Record
Print Material
Author Rorabaugh, W. J.

Title Kennedy and the promise of the sixties / W.J. Rorabaugh.

Imprint Cambridge, UK ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 2002.

Copies

Location Call No. OPAC Message Status
 Axe 2nd Floor Stacks  973.922 R531k 2002    ---  Available
Description xxiii, 317 p. : ill. ; 24 cm.
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (p. 241-304) and index.
Contents Kennedy -- The cold war -- Civil rights -- Families -- Cosmologies -- Dallas.
Summary This book explores life in America during that brief promising moment in the early Sixties when John F. Kennedy was president. Kennedy's Cold War frustrations in Cuba and Vietnam worried Americans. The 1962 missile crisis narrowly avoided a nuclear disaster. The civil rights movement gained momentum with student sit-ins, Freedom Rides, and crises in Mississippi and Alabama. Martin Luther King, Jr., emerged as a spokesman for non-violent social change. The American family was undergoing rapid change. Betty Friedan began to launch the Women's Movement. The Beat authors Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg gained respectability. Joan Baez and Bob Dylan revived folk music. Roy Lichtenstein and Andy Warhol produced Pop Art. Ginsberg, Aldous Huxley, Timothy Leary, and Ken Kesey began to promote psychedelic drugs. The early Sixties was a period of marked political, social and cultural change. The old was swept away, and the country that the United States became began to be born.
Subject Kennedy, John F. (John Fitzgerald), 1917-1963.
United States -- Politics and government -- 1961-1963.
United States -- History -- 1961-1969.
ISBN 0521816173 (hardback)
9780521816175 (hardback)
0521543835 (pbk.)
9780521543835 (pbk.)
Standard No. UKM bA2V7923
UKM bA304639
NLGGC 240820703
NZ1 6938883
AU@ 000024344546
AU@ 000023610556

 
    
Available items only