Transcript Woodstock

Woodstock
Chantelle Cunning
US History Per. 8
June 10, 2010
Overview
• Woodstock was a music and art festival between August 1518, 1969
• There were about 500,000 attendees
• It was intended to be a ticket show, but because of poor
security, many jumped the fence, so the producers declared it
free.
• Tents were put up for food, water, drugs, a place to sleep, and
to cool down and recover from a "bad trip"
• There were three deaths and three births
Introduction
• The hippie movement that emerged in the sixties came about as a
rebellion of the current American culture. Some people said they
were "a red warning light for the American way of life," and even
compare them to early Christians. (The Hippies) They preach the
use of drugs, protesting American culture, and social unity. One of
the biggest hippie events, the Woodstock Music ans Art Festival
reflected all of these ideals.
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Thesis
• Woodstock reflected the ideology of the hippies in the 1960s in its
excessive use of drugs and other hallucinogens, its protest of the
current American government and culture, and, most importantly,
social unity and harmony.
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Drug Use
• Woodstock reflected the hippie ideology of its acceptance and
overdosage of drugs during the 1960s.
o Hippies believed and promoted the use of psychadelic drugs
o LSD (Lysergic acid dietylamide) and marijuana were most
popular.
o LSD was called "the mind detergent" (The Hippies)
• "We were very fortunate to have a little time in history when LSD
was still legal and were able to experiment with drugs just like we
were doing with music." - Jerry George ( 10 Amazing Woodstock
Era Quotes)
• "With no cops present, drug use reached such epidemic
proportions that the festival's public address system lept up a
running commentary on the best kinds of LSD." (Sex, Drugs,
and Rock n' Roll)
Protesting
• Woodstock reflected the hippie deology if its protests of the
Vietnam War, and equal rights for all during the 1960s.
o Hippies protested American culture by forming their utopian
communities.
o Woodstock was a peaceful protest of the Vietnam War, its three
days of peace and love greately contrasting with the war.
• "Festival organizers pointed out that anyone buying a ticket was
contributing to a united front against the war. (History They
Didn't Teach in School)
• "If you want to stop the ******* war, you'll have to sing louder
than that." - Country Joe (History They Didn't Teach in School)
Protesting
• "You had the war in Vietnam. You had civil rights, you had
women's rights, gay rights, and you had the music, which was a
form of communication that we used strongly back then." - Duke
Devlin (10 Amazing Woodstock Era Quotes)
• "And after Woodstock, many like Zeke Boyle and Joe Dipone
(festival participants) went on to protest the war." (Woodstock
Encapsulated an Era of Political and Social Unrest)
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Social Unity/Harmony
• Woodstock reflected the most important part of the hippie
ideology, social unity and harmony during the 1960s.
o Hippies believed in everyone being completely equal, sharing
everything they had.
o At Woodstock, there was almost no violence, only three people
died. Two died from overdoses, and the other was run over by a
tractor.
o They shared everything, food, water, clothes, joints, places to
sleep, etc.
• "The way people were sharing at Woodstock, if you were wet and
cold, they would offer you their extra shirt. They would offer you
food. People were sharing everything. - Zeke Boyle (Woodstock
Encapsulated an Era of Political and Social Protest)
Social Unity/Harmony
• "You know my best Woodstock memory, my favorite thing? It's in
the movie. You see a kid taking a bite of a sandwhich, and passing
it to the next kid, who takes a bite and passes it, on down the line
until 12 kids have had a bite. Sharing, that's what woodstock was,
people helping another." - Artie Kornfield (Sex, Drugs, and Rock
n' Roll)
• "All we are saying is to give peace a try." - John Lenon (10
Amazing Woodstock Era Quotes)
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Conclusion
• Woodstock was a very important event for the hippies of the
sixties. It's events and what it stood for reflect exactly the hippie
culture of the time period. Woodstock greatly promoted the use of
psychadelic drugs, protesting the American culture/government,
and social unity and harmony. The hippie movement reached its
peak with Woodstock in 1969, and it shall never be forgotten.
• http://www.iviewtube.com/videos/76340/jimi-hendrix-starspangled-banner-woodstock-1969
External Links
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http://www.woodstock.com/1969-festival/
http://www.woodstockstory.com/
http://digitaldreamdoor.nutsie.com/pages/music0_woodstock.html
http://history1900s.about.com/od/1960s/p/woodstock.htm
http://www.lehigh.edu/~ineng/jac/jac-liz4.htm