Students, teachers, and interested readers can use this
important resource to examine the evolution of the everyday lives
of ordinary people in the United States from 1960 to 1990. The
volatility of the civil rights movement; the impact of the baby
boom generation; the influences of television, advertising, and
other media; the emergence of environmental and consumer-protection
movements; and the effects the Vietnam War and Watergate had on the
American public are just a few of the issues examined and outlined.
From the space age to the computer age, the user can explore how
change-induced discord and adjustment to postmodern times led to
cultural standoffs, affecting everyday lives.
For the first time the social history of the United States is
examined in four chronological periods: 1960-1966, when modern
ideals flourished and then began to fade; 1967-1974, when cultural
changes began to remake America; 1975-1980, when the cultural
changes led to standoffs between opposing sides; and the 1980s,
when postmodern conditions broadened their influence and discord
became more pronounced. Marty explores the details of everyday
living that these time periods reflected: * the American dream home
in suburbia* the influences of new technologies such as computers,
portable stereos, and microwave ovens * the initial excitement of
space exploration * the growing realities of dual-income and
single-parent families and a vast number of other topics that help
the user trace the evolution of this mutable and exciting time
period.
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