On the Ground
Dublin Core
Title
Creator
Description
Forthright anecdotes and interviews fill this eye-opening account of the birth of the underground newspaper movement. Stemming from frustration with the lack of any mainstream media criticism of the Vietnam War, the creation of the papers was emboldened by the victories of the Civil Rights-era, anticolonial movements in the Third World and the use of LSD. In the four short years from 1965-1969, the subversive press grew from five small newspapers in five cities in the United States to more than 500 newspapers--with millions of readers--all over the world. Stories by the people involved with the production and distribution of the papers, such as Bill Ayers, Paul Buhle, Paul Krassner, and Trina Robbins, bring the history of the movement to life. Full-color scans taken from a broad range of publications, from the Berkeley Barb and the Los Angeles Free Press to Chicago Seed and Screw: The Sex Review , are also included, showing the incredible energy that fueled the counterculture of the 1960s. Read Less
Date
Language
Subject
Publisher
Identifier
9781604864557
Book Item Type Metadata
Sub Title
an illustrated anecdotal history of the sixties underground press in the U.S.
Pages
208
Dewey
71.309046
LC Classification
PN4888.U5 .O5 2011
Library Name
Dimensions
9.1 x 0
21 Box Location
Citation
Sean Stewart, “On the Ground,” Wirtshafter Collection-Cannabis Museum-Athens, Ohio, accessed November 14, 2024, https://cannabismuseum.com/omeka/items/show/7888.