ABSTRACT

What was it like to live through the Sixties?  The writers of these 27 memoirs offer the essence of life and youth in the period. In first-person narratives that range from poignant reminiscences to dramatic adventures, the writers convey what it felt like to land a helicopter in the middle of a firefight in Vietnam, to be beaten and jailed for trying to integrate restaurants in the American South, to run for cover when soldiers opened fire on a campus peace rally in Ohio.  Other stories describe the writers' experiences organizing farm workers with Cesar Chavez, campaigning to elect Barry Goldwater, striking for Free Speech at Berkeley, living in a commune, joining the women's liberation movement, becoming caught up in a religious cult, or camping in the rain at Woodstock.

chapter 1|86 pages

Vietnam

chapter 2|106 pages

Struggles for Social Justice

chapter 3|71 pages

Pathways

chapter 4|51 pages

Conservative Currents

chapter 5|61 pages

Landmark Events

chapter 6|58 pages

Speaking Out