The Beat Generation di Loredana Di Francesco

THE AMERICAN CONTEXT AFTER WORLD WAR II

American context

By the end of World War II , Europe was in ruins and the allied powers who had won the war, the US and USSR, draw an agreement to determine the control of liberated territories: the countries of Eastern Europe, occupied by the Red Army remained under Soviet communist influence, while Western Europe fell under the economic and political influence of the U.S.A., who provided extensive economic aid  for the rebuilding and modernisation of the loser countries (with the Marshall Plan ). In Asia, the US exerted almost complete control over a defeated Japan. Nevertheless, a step towards peace was made in 1945 with the creation of the United Nations Organization (UNO).
When, in 1949, Russia acquired the nuclear bomb and China's revolution occurred, the world fell under the shadow of the so-called " Cold War [ES1] [F1] ": in this period, that lasted thirty years (until the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989), the prospect of nuclear confrontation was very real and feared. The development of the atomic bomb made the general sense of precariousness and instability greater than ever; in the US, many people began to build atomic shelters [E1] in their backyards.
The determination of the Unites States to protect and consolidate its economic and military interests against communism led to two major conflicts, first in Korea   (1950-1953) and then in Vietnam [I1] (1964-1975).
American society of the immediate post-war years, during the administrations of Harry Truman (1945-1952, Democrat) and Dwight D.Eisenhower (1952-1960, Republican), was conditioned to conform to a standard way of life based around the nuclear family, employment in corporate business for men and homework for women, always in the all-pervading atmosphere of the Cold War.
Americans were the most prosperous people in the world: their cities were not bombed and their land did not suffer the damage caused by warfare. Moreover, the war brought economic advantages such as increased production and higher wages: Americans bought more and more consumer goods like cars, television sets, refrigerators and washing machines.
The consumer boom was possible thanks to the advances in production technology and materials which made goods cheaper and more easily available than ever before. However, these same technological innovations had eventually the disadvantage of reducing the need for labor apart from highly skilled technicians.
In the early 1950s Senator Joseph McCarthy , assisted by the FBI of J.Edgar Hoover , set up the House of Un-American Activities Committee, leading to the notorious witch-hunts in which a considerable number of public officers, scientists, intellectuals, artists and figures from the entertainment business were persecuted  for their vaguely socialist sympathies. In the years of maccarthism, freedom of the individual seemed very distant and a split between the intellectuals and the rest of society was inevitable.
J.F.Kennedy [E2] [F1] [ES1] ( a Democrat) was elected in 1961 and became a figure of great symbolic importance to the nation, especially after his  assassination in  Dallas in 1963: he was the first Catholic and the youngest president ever elected.
In 1962, Kennedy presided over the so-called Cuban Missile Crisis (Russia installed nuclear weapons in Cuba and later withdrew them) and over the US's  aborted invasion of the island, at the Bay of Pigs, which for a moment brought the world on the verge of a nuclear war. President Kennedy was perceived as a force of change and rejuvenation: his progressive ideas galvanized protest movements such as the Afro-Americans' campaign for civil rights led by Martin Luther King [F2] [ES1] and Malcolm X . Kennedy's successor, Lyndon Johnson (1963-1968- Democrat) carried on his reforms and persuaded Congress to pass  the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
The Sixties saw the emergence of a youth-led counterculture whose most prominent manifestation was the " hippy [ES1] movement": in  more than one way, the "hippies" can  be considered the Beats' younger siblings.

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