I have to put in a word for Rock and Roll here in relation to May 1968.

Was it progress to hammer african-american culture into the mainstream of 
global discourse, and deify a few key figures of the genre, or was it all just 
a corporate minstrel-show on a grand scale?  Judging from the state of pop 
music today, and to quote Mao's analysis of the French Revolution, it's too 
early to tell.

But if crumbling boundaries between races in the US was accelerated by rock 
music (and its precedents), on a subconscious and behind-the-scenes level, then 
that has stronger implications for the civil-rights movement and May 68 than 
any explicit Bob Dylan / Mommas-and-the-Poppas love connection.   In that 
sense, art has had a direct kinetic influence on politics, and May 1968 in 
particular, by creating community around shared values.  Did that put committed 
radicals into bed with horny dilettantes?  Absolutely.

And don't forget, that while the didactic, world-wide peace and love rebellion 
against the Vietnam Revolution (can we call it that now, please?!) and 
colonialism in general, may have had a high-water mark in the West in May 68, 
the sexual revolution that emerged from the porn industry's synergistic, 
century-long confrontation with Marxist-Feminism was played out on the dance 
floor all through that period.  The collective sexual trance of a rock concert 
provided the social maquette of the 60's mass protest.

"It’s hard to believe, but the word clitoris did not appear in Playboy magazine 
until [May] 1968, in an interview with Masters and Johnson, the famous sex 
researchers."  http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/26/books/26book.html

Rock music, corporate opportunism, Free Love, communications tech, etc all 
succeeded, together, in smashing down a certain social stasis that had taken 
hold, certainly in north america.  The neo-puritan Leave-it-to-Beaver 
hallucination that covered up valium addiction, alcoholism, child abuse, church 
sex scandals, lynching, colonialism, etc etc etc: good riddance to that bad 
baggage.  Hippies certainly took up that culture war in earnest, but the 
rockers were way ahead of them.

-Flick

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