These
and other converging events resulted in “an important rebellion against
the accumulated rigidities of oppressive puritanism, commercialized
culture, corporate power, war making, and race, class and sex prejudice.”
(Armstrong)*
|
|
|
The
Great Speckled Bird.
Vol. 2, no. 17, 1969 (Atlanta,
Ga.: Atlanta Cooperative
News Project)
|
Denied
access to conventional media such as newspapers or network television,
anti-war and counter cultural activists took advantage of technological
innovations in printing processes to create media of their own. Beginning
with a handful of “underground” newspapers, such as the Los Angeles
Free Press, The Berkeley Barb, and The Realist,
the underground press rapidly found wide audience, resulting in a
proliferation of copies available in virtually every major city and
university campus in the country. By 1969, at least four hundred underground
newspapers flourished, most united in spirit by opposition to the
Vietnam War, and advocating rejection of traditional American values,
while embracing rock music, experimentation with drugs, and a breakdown
of sexual barriers.
This
exhibit displays select samples of alternative publications in the
Alternative Press Collection, which is part of the permanent holdings
of Archives and Special Collections of the Thomas J. Dodd Research
Center.