The topic of my research paper is how Hippie culture has been revitalized and integrated into modern society. Almost anywhere one goes, they can find examples of how the sixties have influenced today’s culture. From fashion to music to youth rebellion, there is sixties culture intertwined in most aspects of our society. Much has changed, but the basic principles have remained the same. My paper will focus on comparing and contrasting modern Hippie trends in pop culture. The sixties were an important time for the American youth and the fact that they have continued in a raw form of themselves now demonstrates the circular motion of culture. The revitalization of the Hippie movement is shown through various aspects of modern culture and inspires much of pop culture.
The argument of my paper is that hippie culture has returned and is now more accepted because it is in such a limited form of itself. In the sixties, Hippies had a distinct and uniformed feel. They were distinctive. Now Hippie culture has been diluted and mixed with other counter culture movements to create a modern Hippie movement that allows for societies allowance for it. However, there are exceptions to this allowance of a formally out casted group. The rawest form of Hippie culture lives in what are called head shops. Head shops are stores, usually small, that sell a lot of hippie like products. Usually everything is natural, made of hemp, and provide for the ambiance of the small shops of the sixties where hippies would sell natural options to a heavily modernized and industrial America. These shops also sell water pipes, used for smoking tobacco, and also marijuana. These shops all have a back room for this specific merchandise that only those above eighteen can enter. One example of this shop is called Peace of Sunshine in Catonsville, MD.
This topic is relevant because during the time of the original Hippie movement, the culture was very much rejected by most of society. Hippies were the outcasts but today it is so intertwined in the majority of pop-culture that it is less noticeable and the only people who are not accepted are those who have created a counter culture more intense. I will discuss and analyze why there is such a difference between the original Hippies and “neo- hippies” of today which will examine how the past is recycled and reused, but also interpreted differently in different time periods and morphed into something new because of it.
Bibliography:
Book: ‘They smell bad, have diseases, and are lazy’:. Full Text Available By: Martel, Marcel. Canadian Historical Review, Jun2009, Vol. 90 Issue 2, p215-245, 31p, 4 Charts; DOI: 10.3138/chr.90.2.215
Book: THERE'S A RIOT GOING ON: Revolutionaries, Rock Stars, and the Rise and Fall of '60s Counter-Culture.Full Text Available Kirkus Reviews, 7/1/2008, Vol. 76 Issue 13, p685-685, 1/4p; Reading Level (Lexile): 1380; (AN 33557951)
Media: Oppenheimer, Mark. "Where Have All the College Hippies Gone? : NPR." NPR : National Public Radio : News & Analysis, World, US, Music & Arts : NPR. 28 Sept. 2005. Web. 27 Oct. 2010. <http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=4867538>.
Primary Source: I plan on counting all the Baja’s I see in a day on campus.
Primary Source: Cain, Chelsea. Wild Child: Girlhoods in the Counterculture. Seattle, WA: Seal, 1999. Print
Class Readings:
An American Culture Grid By Jay Mechling
Axioms for Reading the Landscape: Some Guides to the American Scene By Peirce K Lewis
A Proposed Model for Cultural Landscape Study By Jeremy Korr
Article: Pattacini, M. M. Deadheads Yesterday and Today: an Audience Study. 5th ed. Vol. 24. Sage Publications. Print. 591-738
Magazine: Katz, Jesse. "The Bong Wars - John Ashcroft and the Feds Put Their Foot down on Head Shops." Rolling Stone. Print
Website: Peace of Sunshine - Just a Little Head Shop outside Baltimore. Web. 27 Oct. 2010. <http://www.peaceofsunshine.com/>.
