To what extent did the decade of the 1950's deserve its reputation as an age of political, social and cultural conformity?
Title: To what extent did the decade of the 1950's deserve its reputation as an age of political, social and cultural conformity?
Category: /History/World History
Details: Words: 483 | Pages: 2 (approximately 235 words/page)
To what extent did the decade of the 1950's deserve its reputation as an age of political, social and cultural conformity?
Category: /History/World History
Details: Words: 483 | Pages: 2 (approximately 235 words/page)
Conformity is defined in the dictionary as a correspondence in form or character agreement. This correspondence and agreement was something that understandably took away from the individual and more or less "conformed" society in the 50's. The 1950's deserves its reputation as an age of political, social, and cultural conformity to a great extent. Eisenhower's actions to improve old policies were indeed a political conformity. Society was being surrounded with leisure activities that no doubt
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McDonald's. Disneyland first opened as an entertainment park. Even though, there were many changes the public remained up to the title: the age of conformity.
The decade of the 1950's was an age of political, social, and cultural conformity. As any decade does, the 1950s looked back to the solidarity of World War II caused the public to be calm and accept the rules of society. The 1950's predicted the multiple explosions of the 1960s.