"Takin' it to the streets" A Sixties Reader

by ;
Edition: 2nd
Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 2002-12-26
Publisher(s): Oxford University Press
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Summary

The second edition of "Takin' it to the streets" revises the comprehensive collection of primary documents of the 1960s that has become the leading reader on the era. Adopted nationwide, this anthology brings together representative writings, many of which have been unavailable for years orhave never been reprinted. Drawn from mainstream sources, little-known sixties periodicals, pamphlets, public speeches, and personal voices, the selections range from the Port Huron Statement and the NOW Bill of Rights to speeches by Malcolm X, Richard Nixon, and Ronald Reagan, to private lettersfrom civil rights workers and Vietnam soldiers. Introductions and headnotes by the editors highlight the importance of particular documents, relating them to each other and placing them within the broader context of the decade. Particular attention is paid to civil rights, Black Power, the counterculture, the women's movement, anti-waractivity, and gay and lesbian struggles, as well as the conservative current that ran counter to more typical sixties movements. For this revised edition, the editors have added nearly thirty selections, including new readings on religion, the drug culture, the sexual revolution, gay rights,conservatism, and the Vietnam War experience. Covering an extremely popular period of history, "Takin' it to the streets" remains the most accessible and authoritative reader on an extraordinary decade, one unlike America had seen before or has experienced since.

Table of Contents

Preface xv
``Past as Prologue'': The 1950s as an Introduction to the 1960s 1(12)
``Keep on Walkin', Keep on Talkin''': Civil Rights to 1965
13(36)
The Power of Nonviolence
15(3)
Martin Luther King
The Jackson Sit-In
18(3)
Anne Moody
SNCC: Founding Statement
21(1)
The Freedom Rides
22(5)
Wake Up America
27(2)
John Lewis
Letters from Mississippi
29(5)
Testimony Before the Democratic National Convention
34(4)
Fannie Lou Hamer
Rita Schwerner
SNCC Position Paper: Women in the Movement
38(2)
Sex and Caste: A Kind of Memo
40(3)
Casey Hayden
Mary King
Selma
43(6)
Sheyann Webb
``My Generation'': The Student Movement and the New Left
49(54)
Beginnings
50(23)
The Port Huron Statement
50(11)
Letter to the New Left
61(5)
C. Wright Mills
Raising the Question of Who Decides
66(3)
Casey Hayden
How to Help the Ones at the Bottom
69(4)
Jean Smith
Community Organizing
73(8)
The Politics of ``The Movement''
73(4)
Tom Hayden
Cleveland: Conference of the Poor
77(4)
Connie Brown
The Free Speech Movement
81(11)
The Wedding Within the War
81(8)
Michael Rossman
An End to History
89(3)
Mario Savio
Free Speech Movement Leaflets
92(4)
To the Students of Political Science 113
92(1)
``Do Not Fold, Bend, Mutilate, or Spindle''
93(1)
Catch-801
94(1)
Marvin Garson
Freedom Is a Big Deal
95(1)
Barbara Garson
New Left Thinking at Mid-Decade
96(7)
In White America: Radical Consciousness and Social Change
96(4)
Gregory Calvert
Student Power: A Radical View
100(3)
Carl Davidson
``Say It Loud, Say It Proud'': Black Nationalism and Ethnic Consciousness
103(50)
Black Nationalism and Black Pride
105(30)
The Ballot or the Bullet
105(3)
Malcolm X
The Watts Riots
108(1)
The McCone Commission Report on Watts, Violence in the City---An End or a Beginning? and Paul Bullock, Watts: The Aftermath
109(7)
SNCC, The Basis of Black Power
116(6)
Black Art and Black Liberation
122(3)
Larry Neal
The Black Panthers
125(1)
The Black Panther Platform: ``What We Want, What We Believe''
125(3)
Police and the Panthers
128(2)
Deborah Johnson
Flint Taylor
Requiem for Nonviolence [The Death of Martin Luther King, Jr.]
130(3)
Eldridge Cleaver
The Revolt of the Black Athlete
133(2)
Harry Edwards
Latinos
135(10)
Chicano Manifesto
135(3)
Armando B. Rendon
El Plan de Aztlan
138(3)
First National Chicana Conference
141(1)
The Tale of the Raza [Cesar Chavez and the Farm Workers' Movement]
142(3)
Luis Valdez
Asian-Americans
145(3)
The Emergence of Yellow Power
145(3)
Amy Uyematsu
American Indians
148(5)
National Indian Youth Council
148(2)
Watts and Little Big Horn
150(3)
``Hey, Hey, LBJ!'': Vietnam and the Antiwar Movement
153(74)
The War
155(19)
Background to War: Vietnam Documents
155(1)
The Vietnamese Declaration of Independence
156(1)
Geneva Accords
157(3)
John F. Kennedy and the ``Domino Theory''
160(1)
Henry Cabot Lodge on Removing Diem
161(1)
The Tonkin Gulf Resolution
162(1)
McGeorge Bundy and ``Sustained Reprisal''
163(1)
John T. McNaughton's ``Plan for Action for South Vietnam''
164(1)
George Ball and the Internal Opposition
165(1)
Lyndon Johnsnon on Why Fight in Vietnam?
166(2)
One Soldier's View: Vietnam Letters
168(6)
George Skakel
The Antiwar Movement
174(19)
The Incredible War
174(4)
Paul Potter
Trapped in a System
178(5)
Carl Oglesby
SDS Call for a March on Washington
183(1)
SNCC Position Paper on Vietnam
184(2)
Declaration of Independence from the War in Vietnam
186(5)
Martin Luther King, Jr.
Berrigan at Cornell
191(2)
Daniel Berrigan
Resistance and The Draft
193(10)
Channeling
193(2)
The Resistance, We Refuse to Serve
195(1)
Vietnam and the Draft
196(1)
A Time to Say No
197(2)
Michael Ferber
Antidraft Activity
199(1)
Draft Board Raids Up
199(2)
An Open Letter to the Corporations of America
201(1)
Beaver 55 Strikes Again
202(1)
Experiences of War
203(24)
In the War
203(1)
Army Times
203(1)
The Fort Hood Three
204(2)
Antiwar Activity Within the Military
206(1)
The Pentagon Is Rising
206(1)
A Lot of Gls
207(1)
A.W.O.L.
207(1)
Oleo Strut Is Recruiting
207(1)
Join the Foreign Legion
208(1)
My Lai
209(4)
Home Before Morning
213(6)
Lynda Van Devanter
Vietnam Veterans Against the War
219(3)
John Kerry
One Vet Remembers
222(5)
Robert Cagle
``Eight Miles High'': The Counterculture
227(60)
The Arts
229(17)
Trout Fishing in America
229(4)
Richard Brautigan
The Living Theatre
233(4)
Pierre Biner
San Francisco Bray
237(3)
Richard Goldstein
Love, Janis
240(2)
Janis Joplin
Nothing Would Ever Be the Same
242(1)
Danny Sugerman
Rock and Roll Is a Weapon of Cultural Revolution
243(2)
John Sinclair
To Dance
245(1)
Tom Robbins
Religion
246(8)
Buddhism and the Coming Revolution
246(3)
Gary Snyder
Are You Running with Me, Jesus?
249(5)
Malcolm Boyd
The Drug Culture
254(10)
Confessions of a Middle-Aged Pot Smoker
254(4)
LSD: The Acid Test
258(2)
Donovan Bess
The Teachings of Don Juan: A Yaqui Way of Knowledge
260(4)
Carlos Castaneda
The Sexual Revolution
264(4)
Unstructured Relations
264(3)
The Free-Sex Movement
267(1)
Hippies
268(10)
What Is a Hippie?
268(2)
Guy Strait
The Human Be--In
270(3)
Helen Swick Perry
The Digger Papers
273(5)
Yippies
278(5)
Yippie Manifesto
278(1)
Do It
279(4)
Jerry Rubin
Communes
283(4)
The Alternative
283(4)
William Hedgepath
``Love It or Leave It'': The Conservative Impulse in a Radical Age
287(44)
The New Conservatism
290(4)
The Sharon Statement
290(1)
1964 Acceptance Speech
291(3)
Barry Goldwater
The Conservative Impulse in Politics
294(11)
If Mob Rule Takes Hold in the U.S.
294(3)
Richard Nixon
Freedom vs. Anarchy on Campus
297(2)
Ronald Reagan
George Wallace
299(1)
Wallace
300(2)
Pete Hamill
Why Wallace?
302(3)
Michael Novak
Conservative Responses to 1960s Issues
305(12)
The John Birch Society and the Vietnam War
305(3)
Communist Inflitration
308(2)
Edwin Willis
Impudence in the Streets
310(3)
Spiro T. Agnew
Tony Imperiale Stands Vigilant for Law and Order
313(4)
Paul Goldberger
Cointelpro
317(7)
Who Were the Targets?
317(4)
Cointelpro and Homophobia
321(1)
Cointelpro and Violence
322(2)
Counter-Counterculture
324(7)
Air Pollution?
324(2)
Rhythm, Riots and Revolution
326(5)
Rev. David Noebel
``The Whole World is Watching'': 1968 and After
331(56)
Campus Explosions
333(20)
Two, Three, Many Columbias
333(2)
Tom Hayden
Columbia Strike Coordinating Committee, Columbia Liberated
335(3)
San Francisco State: Black Student Union and Third World Liberation Front, List of Strike Demands
338(2)
Harvard: The Rulers and the Ruled
340(1)
Harvard University Strike Poster
341(1)
Santa Barbara
342(2)
University of Illinois
344(2)
International Protests
346(1)
Students of the World . . .
346(1)
Student Uprisings Rock Mexico
347(1)
Voices
348(5)
Ronald Fraser
The Democrats Divide
353(26)
The McCarthy Campaign
353(5)
Jeremy Larner
Godfrey Hodgson, and Bruce Page, An American Melodrama
358(6)
Lewis Chester
The Kerner Report
364(2)
The Chicago Democratic Convention
366(3)
Jeremy Larner
The Walker Commission, Rights in Conflict
369(6)
The Trial
375(4)
Tom Hayden
The New Left Splinters: The Weather Underground
379(8)
Bring the War Home
379(4)
Honky Tonk Women
383(4)
``She's Leaving Home'': The Women's Liberation Movement
387(78)
Liberal Feminism
388(16)
The Problem That Has No Name
388(6)
Betty Friedan
Job Discrimination and What Women Can Do about It
394(4)
Alice Rossi
Now Bill of Rights
398(1)
What Would It Be Like if Women Win
399(5)
Gloria Steinem
Radical Women
404(18)
No More Miss America
404(2)
New York Radical Women, Principles
406(1)
Redstockings Manifesto
407(2)
About My Consciousness Raising
409(3)
Barbara Susan
The Politics of Housework
412(3)
Pat Mainardi
Women's Political Action
415(1)
Women Support Panther Sisters
415(1)
Women Destroy Draft Files
416(1)
Free Our Sisters, Free Ourselves
416(2)
Goodbye to All That
418(4)
Robin Morgan
Our Bodies, Our Sexuality
422(12)
The Myth of the Vaginal Orgasm
422(6)
Anne Koedt
An Abortion Testimonial
428(1)
Barbara Susan
Radicalesbians, The Woman-Identified Woman
429(5)
Race, Ethnicity, and Class: Feminist Issues
434(31)
To My White Working-Class Sisters
434(4)
Debby D'Amico
Double Jeopardy: To Be Black and Female
438(4)
Frances Beal
To Whom Will She Cry Rape?
442(2)
Abbey Lincoln
The Mexican-American Woman
444(4)
Enriqueta Longauex y Vasquez
Conference of Mexican-American Women: Un Remolino
448(4)
Francisca Flores
What Is Reality?
452(1)
Francisca Flores
The Young Lords Party
453(4)
Denise Oliver
Asian Women as Leaders
457(2)
Politics of the Interior
459(6)
``When the Music's Over'': Endings and Beginnings
465(64)
People's Park
467(9)
The Meaning of People's Park
467(6)
John Oliver Simon
Who Owns the Park?
473(1)
Frank Bardacke
Human Values and People's Park
474(1)
Denise Levertov
Their Foe Is Ours
475(1)
Pig's Park
475(1)
Kent State and Jackson State
476(17)
The President's Commission on Campus Unrest, Kent State
476(8)
Get Off Our Campus
484(3)
Tom Grace
What Did They Expect, Spitballs?
487(2)
James Michener
The President's Commission on Campus Unrest, Jackson State
489(4)
Gay Liberation
493(15)
Does Research into Homosexuality Matter?
494(3)
Franklin Kameny
The Homophile Puzzle
497(2)
Clark Polak
Gay Power Comes to Sheridan Square
499(3)
Lucian K. Truscott
What We Want, What We Believe
502(4)
Third World Gay Liberation
Gay Liberation Front Women, Lesbians and the Ultimate Liberation of Women
506(2)
Woodstock and Altamont
508(12)
A Fleeting, Wonderful Moment of ``Community''
508(3)
Coming of Age in Aquarius
511(5)
Andrew Kopkind
The Rolling Stones---At Play in the Apocalypse
516(4)
Michael Lydon
The Environmental Movement
520(9)
The Population Bomb
520(3)
Paul Ehrlich
Lake Erie Water
523(3)
Barry Commoner
Diet for a Small Planet
526(3)
Frances Moore Lappe
The End of the Decade
529(1)
To Recapture the Dream
529
Julius Lester

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