1 / 13

The 1950s POP CULTURE

The 1950s POP CULTURE. Conformity. Why did people in the 1950s conform? Need for Stability after WW2 and G.D. Did not want to be “Un-American” – Era of Communist Hunt. Morality. Fairly Strict Society Rebellion was not acceptable Surge in Religion – felt good indicator of Anti-Communist

penha
Télécharger la présentation

The 1950s POP CULTURE

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The 1950s POP CULTURE

  2. Conformity • Why did people in the 1950s conform? • Need for Stability after WW2 and G.D. • Did not want to be “Un-American” – Era of Communist Hunt

  3. Morality • Fairly Strict Society • Rebellion was not acceptable • Surge in Religion – felt good indicator of Anti-Communist • Added “Under God” to the Pledge of Allegiance • Gender Roles strongly held

  4. FASHION • Prior to the 1950’s, teen clothing very reserved and proper but to some extent that changed in the 50’s. • Guys • Hair longer with sideburns and slicked back with grease or crew cuts • Wore jeans and leather jackets (with the collar turned up to be “cool”) • Button down shirts • Girls • Ponytails • Pedal pushers, Scarves. • Poodle Skirts popular because 1) Easier dancing, being spun around letting the skirt twirled. 2) skirt was loose and free, a sign of freedom.

  5. Youth Culture • TV in 90% of homes by 1959 • Strived to be “average” • Joined school activities • Wanted to copy their parents • Youth Culture • Drive-in movies • Sock Hops – informal HS dance • Fast food restaurants

  6. The Music • POP (1950-1956) • ROCK N’ Roll (1956 ) • Blend of Southern blues and gospel music with an added strong back beat. • Popular with teenagers who were trying to break out of the mainstream conservative American middle class mold. • Consumer culture increased Rock to billion $ industry

  7. Rise of Television • Before 1952 – freeze on any new TV stations so industry had time to plan for expansion and problems • 1952-56, station #s jumped from 108 to 500 • Programs usually broadcasted live • Favorites: Mickey Mouse Club, I Love Lucy, Leave it to Beaver

  8. Changes in TV • On-The Scene Reporting • Game Shows – offered large cash prizes • Businesses spent $$$ on TV Advertising • $170 million in 1950 • $1 billion by 1955 • $2 billion by 1960 • TV Guide = HUGE magazine, TV Dinners created so did not have to miss favorite show

  9. The Beatniks Sought a higher consciousness – Zen Buddhism, music, sometimes drugs Went against the dress/mentality of the 1950s… attracted Media attention and imaginations of college students. • Subculture that expressed the social and literary nonconformity of artists and poets • Lived non-materialistic lives • Shunned regular work

More Related