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6 - Personalized politics and cultural radicalism since the 1960s

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 January 2010

Paul Lichterman
Affiliation:
University of Wisconsin, Madison
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Summary

FROM SPONTANEITY TO ROUTINE

In June 1967, “sobersided” older members and ex-members of Students for a Democratic Society (SDS) gathered to mull over the possibilities for a post-student political organization that could flower amid the youthful energy bursting out in counter-cultural color across the US. Bursting into the activists' plenary meeting were three self-appointed emissaries of the counter-culture. Taking center stage, they taunted and intrigued the assembly with news of its impotence before the allure of a free-love, freewheeling effervescence that was turning on America's youth. The weekend gathering never recovered from its strong hit of shock theater. It never got around to sketching plans for a new organization.

In 1989, at the national Green movement conference in Eugene, Oregon, authorized delegates and other Green activists had gathered to draft a movement platform to take back to their local chapters, and very optimistically, to a wider audience disenchanted with the two US political parties. In the middle of a tedious voting session, the back hallway doors banged several times to successive heave-hos and soon gave way before a missile-shaped cardboard protrusion. Chanting and yelling, a small band of people in torn jeans and sandals hoisted into the auditorium what turned out to be a twenty-foot cardboard reefer. The nominal leader of the Pot People, as they were tagged, insisted his small band would stall the session until the delegates added to their platform a demand for the repeal of marijuana laws.

Type
Chapter
Information
The Search for Political Community
American Activists Reinventing Commitment
, pp. 182 - 212
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1996

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