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Show everybody what I've found Rock-'n'-roll with all my friends Hopin' the music never ends. These happy days are yours and mine. -Happy Days, theme song In American memory, the postwar 1950s have acquired an idyllic luster. Reruns of 1950s TV shows such as <I>LEAVE IT TO BEAVERI> and <I>FATHER KNOWS BESTI> leave today's viewers with an impression of unadulterated family bliss. The baby boomers look back nostalgically to these years that marked their early childhood experiences.
Living in a Material World
The pent-up demand for consumer goods unleashed after the Great Depression and World War II sustained itself through the 1950s. Homes became affordable to many apartment dwellers for the first time. Consequently, the population of the SUBURBS exploded. The huge youth market had a music all of its own called rock and roll, complete with parent-detested icons such as Elvis Presley. Happy Days But Not for AllOf course, not everything was as rosy as it seemed. Beneath the pristine exterior, a small group of critics and nonconformists pointed out the flaws in a suburbia they believed had no soul, a government they believed was growing dangerously powerful, and a lifestyle they believed was fundamentally repressed. And much of America was still segregated.Nevertheless, the notion of the 1950s as happy days lived on. Perhaps when measured against the Great Depression of the 1930s, the world war of the 1940s, the strife of the 1960s, and the malaise of the 1970s, the 1950s were indeed fabulous.
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