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20th Century American History - Social Aspects - Post World War II, United States History - Social Aspects, United States Studies - General & Miscellaneous, Subculture, Counterculture
Hippies American Values by Timothy Miller β€” book cover

Hippies American Values

by Timothy Miller
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Overview

"The sixties' political agenda may have been ground down to ambiguity at best, but moral and spiritual America will never again be quite what it was before the coming of the hippies, and Miller has shown how and why."β€”Robert S. Ellwood, University of Southern California The hippies of the late 1960s were cultural dissenters who, among other things, advocated drastic rethinking of certain traditional American values and standards.  In this lucid, lively survey, Timothy Miller traces the movement's ethical innovations and analyzes the impact of its ideas on subsequent American culture.

Dedicated to such tenets as the primacy of love, trust in intuition and direct experience, the rejection of meaningless work, and a disdain for money and materialism, the hippies advocated dropping out of the dominant culture, and proposed new and more permissive ethics in several areas.  They argued that, while some drugs were indeed harmful, others provided useful insights and experiences and therefore should be freely available and widely used.  They endorsed a liberal ethics of sex, in which no sexual act between or among consenting adults would be banned.  They developed an ethics of rock-and-roll music, arguing that rock was the language of a generation and that it helped promote new ways of thinking and living.  They also revived the venerable American tradition of communal living.
In contrast to most available literature on the 1960s, this book deals with the cultural revolutionaries and not the political radicals of the New Left.  And instead of relying on later interviews with persons who were active in the 1960s, Miller draws mainly on underground newspapers of the day, the most important literary creation of the hippies themselves.  The result is a historical encounter of rare immediacy.

Timothy Miller is assistant professor of religious studies at the University of Kansas.

About the Author, Timothy Miller

Timothy Miller is assistant professor of religious studies at the University of Kansas.

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Editorials

Library Journal

The 1960s counterculture movement and its embraced ethical values are the subject of this very readable work. Miller (religious studies, Univ. of Kansas) used the so-called ``underground'' newspapers of that era as his primary research tool. The result is a thorough look at what the hippies and their allies sought to fundamentally change in the then-entrenched mainstream of American values. There were many bones of contention, but most of what Miller terms ``cultural opposition'' fall into four main categories: drugs, sex, rock music, and the sense of community. After introducing these areas in their 1960s embodiment, he surveys their effect on the 1990s. The topics are covered in a lively and informative style, though the movement's detractors may find the author a bit too sympathetic to the countercultural movement in his conclusions. Nevertheless, this valuable scholarly effort also makes for interesting pleasure reading.-- David M. Turkalo, Social Law Lib., Boston

Booknews

The hippies of the late 1960s were cultural dissenters who, among other things, advocated drastic rethinking of certain traditional American values and standards. In this survey, Miller (religious studies, U. of Kansas) traces the movement's ethical innovations and analyzes the impact of its ideas on subsequent American culture. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

Book Details

Published
September 1, 1991
Publisher
University of Tennessee Press
Pages
256
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780870496943

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