"More than other local histories of campus activism during this period, Dissent in the Heartland introduces national themes and events, and successfully places Indiana University into that context. The research in primary sources, including FBI files, along with numerous interviews, is superior, and the writing is lucid and at times provocative." --Terry H. Anderson, author of The Sixties This grassroots view of student activism in the 1960s chronicles the years of protest at one Midwestern university. Located in a region of farmland, conservative politics, and traditional family values, Indiana University was home to antiwar protestors, civil rights activists, members of the counterculture, and feminists who helped change the heart of Middle America. Its students made their voices heard on issues from such local matters as dorm curfews and self-governance to national issues of racism, sexism, and the Vietnam War. Their recognition that the personal was the political would change them forever. The protest movement they helped shape would reach into the heartland in ways that would redefine higher education, politics, and cultural values. Based on research in primary sources, interviews, and FBI files, Dissent in the Heartland reveals the Midwestern pulse of the Sixties, beating firmly, far from the elite schools and urban centers of the East and West.
It made me feel just like I was there -- wait a minute, I was!
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 17 years ago
This book is fascinating! While I was never an activist, I was a student at Indiana University in the mid-60s, and I recall everything of what the author had to say about the times as being very accurate. When I went to I.U. as a freshman in 1963, women students still had a curfew, and male students had to take two years of compulsory ROTC. I put in my two years of ROTC (grudgingly) and then discovered that student "activists" had successfully campaigned to make it optional. It made me wish I had been more of an activist myself, and I would have been able to skip the second year of ROTC like they did! What I found most compelling about this book was the author's accounts of how student activism increased and changed after I graduated in 1967 and left the state -- wow, did it ever! This is a well-researched and well-written book and will be enjoyed particularly by anyone who is familiar with the time and place. Those who are not will also benefit from learning more about this socially and politically important era. It made me want to go back and visit Bloomington, Indiana all over again.
Well Worth Reading
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 22 years ago
Mary Ann Wynkoop has written the definitive history of Indiana University student dissent in the 60's. I know first-hand most of the people and events of which she writes, and can say from personal experience that her book is accurate, sensitive, and reliable. This book will be of interest not only to present and former IU students, but to anyone who is interested in the American anti-war, student protest, civil rights, and early feminist movements of that time.
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