Youth, Mass, Culture, and Protest: The Rise and Impact of 1960s Antiwar Music

Author

Teach Rock

Publisher

Teach Rock

Place of Publication

Online

Year of Publication

N/A

Language

English

“How did antiwar protest music provide a voice for those opposed to the Vietnam War? Social protest provided young people with a voice they didn’t always have at the ballot box. Popular music, already a vital part of youth culture by the mid-1960s, became a vehicle through which they could hear their concerns put to music. The music helped to build the antiwar community. In earlier eras, protest music sometimes had a subtle tone, propelled by acoustic instruments. By the late 1960s, however, it took on the instrumentation of Rock and Roll and made its way to the top of the charts. Not until 1971 did the 26th Amendment grant suffrage to 18-year-olds, empowering those most directly affected by the military draft. With the war increasingly unpopular at home and no American victory in sight, the United States negotiated a peace treaty and withdrew from Vietnam in 1975. The music of 1960s protest, however, remained among the era’s most enduring legacies.”
MMA: Music
Freedom of assembly and association, Conflict environments

Click on the button(s) below to download the resource file in your language(s).