42 research outputs found

    Radicals in the Heartland: The 1960s Student Protest Movement at the University of Illinois

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    Review of: Radicals in the Heartland: The 1960s Student Protest Movement at the University of Illinois, by Michael V. Metz

    Dissent in the Heartland: the Sixties at Indiana University

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    Review of: Dissent in the Heartland: The Sixties at Indiana University. Wynkoop, Mary Ann

    Radicals in the Heartland: The 1960s Student Protest Movement at the University of Illinois

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    Review of: Radicals in the Heartland: The 1960s Student Protest Movement at the University of Illinois, by Michael V. Metz

    Dissent in the Heartland: the Sixties at Indiana University

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    Review of: Dissent in the Heartland: The Sixties at Indiana University. Wynkoop, Mary Ann

    Radicals in the Heartland: The 1960s Student Protest Movement at the University of Illinois

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    Review of: Radicals in the Heartland: The 1960s Student Protest Movement at the University of Illinois, by Michael V. Metz

    A chromosome conformation capture ordered sequence of the barley genome

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    201

    “Measure Them Right”: Lorraine Hansberry and the Struggle for Peace

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    Lorraine Hansberry\u27s concerns about peace issues have been largely neglected in previous scholarship. Absorbing the views of the Communist left of the post-World War II era, particularly those of Paul Robeson and W. E. B. Du Bois, and coupling these with her personal abhorrence of war and violence, she expressed a commitment to peace that was evident from the Progressive Party campaign of 1948 until her untimely death in 1965. Her focus on opposing U. S. Cold War policies — including support for European colonialism, the war in Korea, and the buildup of nuclear weapons — was of necessity combined with opposition to McCarthyist measures intended to silence such opposition. Hansberry was not alone in making a long-term commitment to the “fight for peace” (as it was called during the 1948 presidential campaign), and recognizing the way in which she and her contemporaries linked peace and freedom enriches their legacy

    My Song is My Weapon: People's Songs and the Politics of Culture, 1946-1949 (Folksingers, Communism).

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    In a time that was decisive for determining the future direction of American politics, People's Songs posed a radical alternative vision to the developing cold war consensus. The group of Communist-oriented musicians and activists tried to sow the seed of a "people's culture" based on folk and folk-style songs, group singing, and a vision of a peaceful and just world. These elements were significant in sustaining the left during People's Songs' lifespan, while accounting for the group's long-term impact on American culture. The songs, singing and issues that characterized People's Songs' work provided critical links between the Popular Front radicalism of the 1930s and the Civil Rights movement and the New Left of the 1950s and 1960s. People's Songs' work and outlook shaped, and was shaped by, the culture of the Communist movement. The movement culture served as a powerful unifying force, simultaneously sustaining the movement and contributing to its isolation. Without the wholeness and quality of the movement's internal life, sectarianism and lack of democracy notwithst and ing, the depth of commitment that led to significant creative work would have been lacking. While their commitment to the movement limited the impact of People's Songsters--because of domestic anti-communism, and the American movement's subordination to Soviet Communism--the same passionate commitment explains their positive contributions to American life. "My Song Is My Weapon" traces the political and cultural development of the Communist movement, from Third Period Communism and proletarian music to the Popular Front and folk music in the 1930s, from the movement's shifting positions and the career of the Almanac Singers during World War II to the contradictions of the postwar period. It then focuses on People's Songs' cultural theory, the content and meaning of the songs, and the two major forums in which the songs were sung: the hootenanny and Henry Wallace's 1948 presidential campaign. The conclusion evaluates People's Songs legacy and frames some ongoing theoretical questions about the relationship between a political movement and its culture.Ph.D.American studiesUniversity of Michiganhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/160370/1/8502876.pd
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