All posts tagged: 60s

Black church leaders brought religion to politics in the ‘60s – but it was dramatically different from today’s white Christian nationalism

Black church leaders brought religion to politics in the ‘60s – but it was dramatically different from today’s white Christian nationalism

(The Conversation) — Fifty-eight years ago in the summer of 1966, a group of Black church leaders took out a full-page advertisement in The New York Times titled “Black Power.” Their densely worded statement called on national leaders, “white churchmen,” Black citizens and the mass media to correct the country’s racial power imbalance. In essence, they asked their fellow citizens to support Black power. Prominent church leaders such as Rev. Paul Washington of the Church of the Advocate in Philadelphia, Rev. Gayraud Wilmore of the Presbyterian Commission on Religion and Race, and Rev. Benjamin Payton of the National Council of Churches were among the signatories. With years of civil rights experience, 48 Black church leaders boldly asserted their unequivocal support for the Black Power movement. Like many white Christian nationalists in 2024, these Black church leaders believed that God was punishing their beloved country. Both groups called for repentance and fundamental change. And like white Christian nationalists, the 1966 Black Christian activists asserted that their faith had something to say on matters of racial identity …

Hollywood hysteria: the 60s movies that showed a time of madness | Film

Hollywood hysteria: the 60s movies that showed a time of madness | Film

In assembling a slate of films, a programming team or other curatorial body will often be made to answer the question of why now, what relevance old art has to the current moment. In the case of the Criterion Channel’s new series Hollywood Crack-Up: The Decade American Cinema Lost Its Mind, a sampling of arthouse hysteria from across the 60s, the argument all but makes itself. These bursts of celluloid madness come from a not-so-remote time when governmental credibility had hit an all-time low and the culture-war rift yawned wider than ever; when the disillusionment of a mistreated youth generation exploded into student protests against an overseas war colored by unsavory political imperatives; when ascendant minority groups demanded rights and dignity in the face of high-boil prejudice; when a terrified old guard felt that everything they could once take for granted had been upended and replaced by unfamiliar, strange, anti-authoritarian new normals. Calamity was in the air. Surely, somehow, we can find it in ourselves to relate. The 16 fever dreams of delusion, brainwashing, public …

Vintage fans in London gear up to recreate 60s mood at festival of mod | Festivals

Vintage fans in London gear up to recreate 60s mood at festival of mod | Festivals

Hundreds of vintage fanatics, dressed in tailor-made suits and berets, are expected to descend on London this weekend for a three-day event celebrating mod subculture. Modstock, launched 30 years ago by a British vintage fanatic, Rob Bailey, and his organisation New Untouchables, returns for its fourth edition. Taking place only every 10 years, each edition of Modstock is a three-day and all-night event with vintage car shows, talks and panels, live music, market stalls, a scooter run, club nights, and a Thames boat party. Alexandra Mason has been attending mod and 60s events for several years. Photograph: Andy Blakeley “We are celebrating the culture which has, over the last six decades, influenced a lot of things in this country – particularly music and fashion, which is two of our greatest exports,” said Bailey. Modstock will take place in west London, and welcomes 60s icons including the singers PP Arnold and Fay Hallam and the drummer Kenney Jones. It will also host bands, DJs, clothes makers, vintage car sellers and more who were not around in …

Looking back at Melbourne in the 60s and 70s – in pictures | Art and design

Looking back at Melbourne in the 60s and 70s – in pictures | Art and design

Chris Lermanis is a keen amateur photographer who spent his weekends in the late 1960s and early 1970s photographing around the inner Melbourne suburbs of Fitzroy, Carlton and Collingwood with his Pentax SV camera and 50mm lens. He hand-processed the black and white films at home and made prints in the bathroom or laundry, which was temporarily converted into a darkroom. During this time the houses and factories were being demolished and the new housing commission towers built. Lermanis recently started looking at his old prints and now has a book project planned. Source link

Trinny Woodall: My 60s are a freeing decade – I’m more confident

Trinny Woodall: My 60s are a freeing decade – I’m more confident

Stay ahead of the trend in fashion and beyond with our free weekly Lifestyle Edit newsletter Stay ahead of the trend in fashion and beyond with our free weekly Lifestyle Edit newsletter Trinny Woodall may have just turned 60, but there’s no way she’s going grey. “Everyone’s entitled to how they want to age – some people might say, ‘Trinny, why do you keep dyeing your hair? You should go grey naturally’. Not in a million years! I have s***** coloured grey hair, I’m not going to do that. I don’t love grey hair on me.” Woodall, who rose to fame as one half of presenting duo Trinny and Susannah (Constantine) on the Noughties makeover show, What Not To Wear, and founded beauty empire Trinny London in her 50s, says she’s “more confident” as she enters this new decade – in her skin and herself. “I think I feel that I really know who I am. The benefit of age is you really discover who you are. And you don’t worry what people think. In …

London’s BT Tower is to be ‘repurposed’ – let’s just hope no one messes with its 60s perfection | Rowan Moore

London’s BT Tower is to be ‘repurposed’ – let’s just hope no one messes with its 60s perfection | Rowan Moore

In his 1994 movie London, a classic of poetical-geographical film-making, its director-writer Patrick Keiller speculates that the BT tower, that rises on the site that once contained a flat inhabited by Paul Verlaine and Arthur Rimbaud, is a secret monument to the French poets’ love. This is one of many instances of this structure’s ability to generate myths – legend also had it that, as military secret, it couldn’t be shown on Ordnance Survey maps. With its slender vertical fuselage and long-stalled revolving restaurant, it speaks of the hopeful futurism of the 1960s, of the white heat of technology, of Minis and miniskirts and the Beatles. Its sale, for £275m, by BT to a hotel group, if it gives the tower a secure future, is welcome. I’m more troubled by the reports that the designer Thomas Heatherwick is to “repurpose” the building. His past work shows that he’s not one to leave well alone, but rather festoon structures with over-sized flower-pots and look-at-me swirling shapes. One can only hope that he discovers some restraint. The …

 The antisemitic cartoon roiling Harvard caused ’60s firestorm

 The antisemitic cartoon roiling Harvard caused ’60s firestorm

When the Harvard Palestine Solidarity Committee and the Harvard African and African American Resistance Organization put together an infographic for Instagram, their goal was to showcase the historic connections between the Black and Palestinian liberation movements. They gathered old images of Black activists who had been vocal advocates of the Palestinian cause, including Angela Davis and Malcolm X. They quoted Nelson Mandela: “Freedom is incomplete without the freedom of the Palestinians.” And they plucked an old cartoon from the archives of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee — one that roiled the civil rights movement when it first appeared in 1967 and has lost none of its ability to outrage. The drawing shows a white hand, marked with a dollar sign inside a Star of David, tightening nooses around the necks of a Black man and an Arab man. Drawn by Black artist Herman “Kofi” Bailey, it first appeared in a SNCC newsletter alongside an article fiercely critical of Zionism, leading to charges of antisemitism and furious condemnation of the SNCC from Jewish community leaders. More …

“Love the throwback stuff”: Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Super Bowl ad mimics John F. Kennedy ’60s ad

“Love the throwback stuff”: Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Super Bowl ad mimics John F. Kennedy ’60s ad

A group supporting Robert F. Kennedy Jr. ran an ad during the Super Bowl on Sunday, mimicking a 1960s spot of his uncle John F. Kennedy’s own campaign.  The nostalgic 30-second spot funded by the PAC, American Values 2024, paralleled the former President JFK’s presidential campaign ad. In the RFK ad, images of the third-party candidate and phrases like “A time for greatness,” “vote independent,” and “Kennedy for President 2024” flashed onto the screen with a vintage-retro 1960s aesthetic and callback to JFK’s ad.  American Values 2024 is supporting the former Democrat and now independent candidate running for the 2024 election, in what is called a long-shot campaign. The ad cost the PAC $7 million, The Hill reported. The ad was met with varied responses online. Former Fox News anchor Megyn Kelly posted on X, “Loved that Kennedy ad! Love the throwback stuff.” Despite those few positive responses, Kennedy generally has been met with backlash for his candidacy. The politician, who is an anti-vaxx activist and descendant of lauded Kennedy heritage, launched his 2024 bid for a presidential campaign …

How to have good sex in your 40s, 50s, 60s, 70s and 80s

How to have good sex in your 40s, 50s, 60s, 70s and 80s

From illness to medication, any number of issues can take a toll on intimacy As we get older, any number of things – from illness to medication, body confidence, relationship worries and family dynamics – can impact our sex lives. Here, doctors and therapists explain the ups and downs you might encounter in every decade. This guide covers: Can you have great sex at any age? “Yes, but we have to define what great sex actually means,” says Ammanda Major, a sex therapist and the head of clinical practice at Relate. “If you look at movies or social media, it’s generally people having multiple orgasms. But for many people, simply being together intimately can be rewarding.” Sex can mean different things to different people, and it changes as we go through life. “We have to recognise how our bodies change over time and how the ageing process impacts us sexually. There’s something to be said for accepting that and working with what’s possible, rather than comparing yourself with everybody else.” What happens to your sex …