Saturday, November 3, 2012

Planned Parenthood and the "Pill"

For many years now, the most popular form of birth control has been referred to as the "pill."   Numerous people in the medical field contributed to the creation and development of this contraceptive all throughout the 1950s.  It was eventually approved by the FDA (Food and Drug Administration) in May of 1960 and first sold that same year.

Without Planned Parenthood though, the birth control movement would not have been nearly as successful as it was.  Planned Parenthood is a non-profit organization providing female and reproductive health services, established in 1921 by Margaret Sanger.  Sanger set out on a mission and successfully accomplished her main goal- an easy contraceptive in the form of a pill.  This first "pill" was named Envoid, and within the first 5 years, one in every four women had used the "pill."


Not only did Sanger and the others who were part of the organization have a huge impact on the success of the contraceptive pill, but they had a significant impact on both the women's and birth control movements as well.  The effects that the establishment of the "pill" had on women has forever altered their feeling of control and freedom in their own lives.

Now, instead of having intercourse and not being able to control pregnancy, women have a very effective means of controlling it.  They were able to be more free to sexual intercourse without the consequence of pregnancy every time they did so.  This was so beneficial to women and their husbands because they were now able to sort of "plan" their families.  If a woman wanted to make love to her husband but they were not ready to have children of their own, they could do that.







sources:
http://www.fda.gov/
http://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.php?id=3137
http://www.plannedparenthood.org/about-us/who-we-are/history-and-successes.htm
http://www.plannedparenthood.org/
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/pill/gallery/gal_pill_01.html
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/pill/peopleevents/p_sanger.html
http://www.women-health-info.com/218-Birth-control-pills-facts.html(picture)

Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Deranged Debutante

          Rich, white, young, beautiful girl: kidnapped and brainwashed. This was the story of Patty Hearst, which captivated the attention of the nation for years. Patty Hearst was the granddaughter of William Randolph Hearst, a famous American newspaper publisher of the late nineteenth century, and the great-granddaugther of George Hearst, a multimillionaire. Her privileged upbringing and her rising acting career provided her with socialite status.
Young, beautiful Patty Hearst before her abduction


          Hearst was 19 years old in 1974, when she was kidnapped from her 26-year-old boyfriend's apartment in Berkley, California by the Symbionese Liberation Army. This group, known as the SLA, was a left-wing revolutionary group that was especially active between 1973 and 1975. They were known for their acts of violence, including murders and robberies.
          When Hearst was abducted, the SLA first demanded that their members in jail be released in return for Hearst. Their swap was refused; they then asked the Hearsts to donate 400 million dollars to California's needy. Patty Hearst's father agreed to donate 6 million dollars worth of food, but when he did so, the SLA refused to release Patty because of the poor quality of the food.
          Interest was sparked in the case when the SLA released a recording of Hearst saying her father could have done better with the food. Hearst also denounced her family in other ways, and claimed that she joined the SLA and changed her name to Tania.
          Just a few months later, Hearst was photographed robbing the Hibernia Bank in San Francisco. During her time with the SLA, she participated in other illegal activity and declared her love for one of the main members of the group, Wolfe. She claimed that he was "the gentlest, most beautiful man I've ever known."

            Patty Hearst photographed robbing the Hibernia Bank

          The FBI and the SFPD finally arrested Hearst in September of 1975, along with one other member of the SLA. Upon her arrest, she listed her occupation as "Urban Guerrilla." During the months of her pretrial confinement, Hearst continued to identify herself as a member of the SLA. At trial in 1976, Hearst's defense claimed that she been brainwashed and suffered Stockholm Syndrome, a psychological phenomenon in which hostages eventually develop positive feelings towards and side with their captors.
          During the trial, Hearst claimed that she had been sexually abused by members of the SLA, including Wolfe, of whom she had spoken so fondly. She said that she had been imprisoned in a dark, narrow closet for days. The defense claimed that Hearst's behaviors had been a result of this brainwashing.
          The prosecution, however, offered evidence about Hearst's rebellious adolescence. The prosecution undermined her credibility by revealing inconsistencies and omissions in her testimony, especially her failure to provide evidence about other captured SLA members, and ultimately obtained a conviction.
         After many efforts and attempts, Hearst was finally granted a full pardon by President Bill Clinton in 2001 and the charges against her were dropped.

Sources:
http://www.trutv.com/library/crime/terrorists_spies/terrorists/hearst/1.html
http://www.hearstcastle.org/history-art/historic-people/william-randolph-hearst
http://www.hearstcastle.org/history-art/historic-people/george-hearst
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Symbionese_Liberation_Army
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Willie_Wolfe
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stockholm_syndrome
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_people_pardoned_by_Bill_Clinton
http://law2.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/hearst/hearstbio75.jpg
http://www.cnn.com/CNN/Programs/people/images/story.bank.rob.jpg

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Tragic Poets

          Over time, there have been numerous poets who have been mentally ill, often being depressed, bipolar, or alcoholics. Many of them even took their own lives. Some of the most well-known poets to have taken their lives are Anne Sexton, Randall Jarrell, Sylvia Plath, John Berryman, Adam L. Gordon, Sergei Esenin, Vladimir Mayakovsky, Sarah Teasdale and Hart Crane.
       
English poet Thomas Chatterton dead at age 17 from suicide by arsenic poisoning

          Each poet had their own personal reasons to commit suicide, but researches compared the works of nine non-suicidal poets to nine suicidal poets and found similarities in the language of the suicidal poets that foreshadowed their downfalls. This research article was called "Word Use in the Poetry of Suicidal and Non-Suicidal Poets," published in Psychomatic Medicine in 2001. The authors and researches were James Pennebaker and Shannon Wiltsey Stirman, both psychologists.
          According to Dr. Pennebaker, suicidal poets used first person singular words like "my" and "I" at much higher rates than those who were not suicidal, and they referenced other people much, much less. There was not much of a difference in emotional content between the two groups, although suicidal poets used words for human interaction much less, such as "listen", "talk" and "share."
          It was also found that poets in particular were subject to a higher suicide rate than other literary writers and the public. Pennebaker noted that while all poets did not show signs of manic-depression or other mental illness, they were not a group that was known to be happy and cheerful. He also noted that the language similarities of poets who committed suicide could serve as "linguistic predictors of suicide" for modern poets today.

Sources:

Tradition Goes Out the Window

A comic that mocks the Sexual Revolution
    Chivalry, abstinence, and tradition are three words that were no longer so strongly stressed by the 1960s, thanks to the Sexual Revolution.

    The Sexual Revolution was the liberation of established social and moral attitudes toward sex, as the women's liberation movement and developments in contraception instigated greater experimentation with sex, especially outside of marriage. 

    This new concept of sexual liberation was extremely controversial at the time; it 
included increased acceptance of sex outside of traditional heterosexual, monogamous relationships. Following closely behind were contraception, public nudity, the normalization of homosexuality, and the legalization of abortion

    Many question how this came about to begin with; there are a few theories, but it is argued that one specific cause alone can not be attributed with this large phenomenon. One suggested trigger for the modern revolution was the development of the birth control pill in 1960, which gave women access to easy and reliable contraception. Another theory is that the revolution was more directly influenced by the financial independence gained by the women who entered the workforce during and after World War II, making the revolution more about individual equality.

    Purchasing an aphrodisiac became "normal". Sado-masochism ("S&M") gained popularity, and "no-fault" unilateral divorce became legal and easier to obtain in many countries during the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s. All of these things became acceptable in a society that once ostracized women for having a baby with a man to whom she wasn't married to. 

    Other contributions that helped bring about this modern revolution of sexual freedom were the writings of Herbert Marcuse and Wilhelm Reich, who took the philosophy of Karl Marx and similar philosophers, and mixed together this chant for freedom of sexual rights in modern culture.

 
  America's perspective was rapidly changing, and many were on board. Beginning in San Francisco in the mid 1960s, a new culture of "free love" emerged, with thousands of young people becoming "hippies" who preached the power of love and the beauty of sex as part of ordinary life. This is part of a counterculture that exists to the present, for today "hippies" would not be very socially acceptable. 


    Free love continued in different forms throughout the 1970s and into the early 1980s, but its more assertive manifestations ended abruptly, or disappeared from public view, in the mid-1980s when the public first became aware of AIDS, a deadly sexually transmitted disease.

    The Sexual Revolution permanently altered America's view on abstinence, homosexuality, and more controversial issues like abortion. Although it opened many doors, there are still debates going on to this day about whether or not many of these practices are morally just; and I don't see everyone agreeing on one set answer anytime in the near future. 


Sources: 
http://www.greenberg-art.com/.Toons/.Toons,%20favorites/qqxsgNew%20sexual%20revolution.gif
http://www.google.com/#hl=en&q=sexual+revolution&tbs=dfn:1&tbo=u&sa=X&ei=nDOHUMCwH4St0AHD1YCICA&ved=0CBsQkQ4&bav=on.2,or.r_gc.r_pw.r_qf.&fp=721d8d413178fdae&bpcl=35466521&biw=1211&bih=684
http://www.isis.aust.com/stephan/writings/sexuality/revo.htm
http://sixtiesbritain.co.uk/history/2010/05/25/history-the-oral-contraceptive-pill/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public_nudity
http://www.exodusglobalalliance.org/whatishomosexualityp93.php
http://www.bpas.org/bpasyoungpeople/what-is-abortion
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/No-fault_divorce
http://www.egs.edu/library/herbert-marcuse/biography/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wilhelm_Reich
http://www.historyguide.org/intellect/marx.html

Sunday, October 21, 2012

The 1950's Housewives

When World War II broke out, a majority of American men left the country for war.  As a result, the women took over the jobs (such as factory jobs) in America that those men previously had.  The war ended in 1945, and as the 1950s rolled around, the men were reclaiming their previous jobs.  Consequently, women's roles changed back to the housewife status, their priority being housekeeping and caring for their husbands and children.

This role of women though, was more flexible than it had been in the past.  A large number of women actually kept the jobs that they had while the men went to war.  The numbers of marriages and births rapidly increased in the 1950s, but at the same time, the number of women in the work force was also increasing.

Regardless of the increasing numbers of working women, it was still looked down upon if women worked, especially if her family already had a sufficient amount of money.  It was looked down upon and a woman was deemed "selfish" if she had a job outside of their house but their family was making enough money already.  It was still more culturally accepted for the woman to stay home, her focus being on creating and caring for a family.

Because of this changing role of women, the number of women attending college decreased during the 1950s.  Many were instead getting married directly out of high school, around the age of 19.  Women who DID attend school were encouraged to take classes in housekeeping and financing, being that they are expected to take care of those duties in the house, while their husbands worked.

SOURCES:
http://www.sivaramaswami.com/en/2008/08/28/what-men-want/ (picture)
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/pill/peopleevents/p_mrs.html
http://1950s.weebly.com/womens-roles.html
http://www.history.com/topics/world-war-ii

Saturday, October 20, 2012

"The King"

Almost everyone knows who "the King" is.  Elvis Presley is commonly referred to as the "King of Rock and Roll."  Elvis was an American singer and actor, born in Tupelo, Mississippi.  He lived from 1935 to 1977, passing away in Memphis, Tennessee.  While a very popular actor, appearing in many commercials, TV shows, and movies, his first being the film Love Me Tender, I am going to focus on Elvis's true passion, singing.

As a teenager, Elvis enjoyed listening to pop and country music the most.  His first record label was with Sun Records in 1954 in Memphis, Tennessee.  In 1955, Elvis was sold to RCA Victor, and within a year he became a huge rock and roll sensation.

It wasn't just the voice and music that this man made, it was his handsomeness, humor, and charming character that made him so undeniably appealing to Americans.  Women all over were "wooed" by this man's charm and the dance moves he pulled off so well on stage.

Proving his popularity, Elvis won many awards during his lifetime.  Some of the most impressive being the Golden Globe award in 1973 (for best documentary film) and the Golden Laurel Award in 1966, for best male performance in a musical film (Tickle Me).

Elvis is very clearly one of the most famous entertainers of the 20th century, due to his charm, talent, and personality.  He is still very well-known to this day, and probably will be for years and years to follow.

The video below is of one of Elvis's most famous singles, "Jailhouse Rock" (1957)



Sources:
http://www.funscrape.com/Search/1/elvis.html (picture)
http://www.elvis.com/about-the-king/biography_.aspx
http://www.rcarecords.com/
http://www.goldenglobes.org/
http://www.imdb.com/event/ev0000394/
http://www.sunrecords.com/
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0049452/
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0056585/

Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Reverse Commute


      After the Great Migration of African Americans to the industrial and urban areas in the North, the  subsequent sudden population shift of millions of African Americans back to the South in just 35 years needed some explanation. Analysis of migration data showed that the deindustrialization of the Northeast and Midwest, the growth of jobs in the south, the lower cost of living in the South, and family ties in the South were all factors of this "New Great Migration" beginning in 1965 and becoming more prevalent in the late 1900's.
          Two of the largest groups of people to contribute to this migration were recent college graduates and the middle-class. The populations dramatically dropped in New York and Northern New Jersey as they rose in the Southern United States, especially in Florida, Georgia and Texas. In fact, Georgia and Texas became known as the "brain gain" states because they brought in the most African American college graduates from 1995 to 2000. 
          Outside the Confederacy, the African American population in Maryland rose steadily, especially in the areas surrounding Washington D.C. Analysis showed that the African American population also shifted from Northern metropolitan areas like Chicago and Los Angeles to Southern metropolitan areas, especially Atlanta. The cities in California lost more African Americans than they even gained in the 1900's.
African American population according to 2000 census. Darker states show a greater population.
                                          
          The New Great Migration was especially concentrated in the cities and states with the most economic growth, like Georgia, North Carolina, Virginia, Tennessee, Florida, and Texas.
          The effects of this migration and resulting population shift impact the government today. As more and more middle-class African Americans leave the North to go to the South, it is more difficult for government officials to count on tax revenues in the North. Also, the owners of African American business are now suffering from losing patrons, customers, church members, etc. to the South. 
          Today, as this population change still continues, scientists and sociologists are looking into the motivation and everlasting effects of this continual change.

Sources: