In the Vanguard
The other thing I should say about this period, roughly from
1960 till 1965, is that "we" [by which I mean me and the circles I
travelled in] were very self-consciously in the "vanguard", on the
cutting edge of social change. Here's what I mean by this: All of
the cultural and political things that we were among the first to
do became extremely popular nationally and internationally in the
subsequent years. By this I mean the music we listened to [folk
and jazz and early "world beat" like Ravi Shankar and Olatunji],
the books we read [beat poetry, Marcuse, C Wright Mills, Paul
Goodman, James Baldwin], the way we wore our hair, the movies we
watched [from "foreign films" like the French New Wave to Andy
Warhol and new American cinema], the drugs we took [Leary's slogan
was "LSD in '63, even more in '64"], the way we dressed, and the
way we made love. New York, with it's combination of beatnik
culture, left politics, and racial mixing, was a really exciting
place to be. Art D'Lugoff's Village Gate sponsored a benefit
concert with Pete Seeger for striking miners in Harlan County; City
College CORE had a folk benefit with the New Lost City Ramblers,
the Greenbrier Boys, and a little-known named Bob Dylan. Amos
Vogel, who owned the New Yorker theater, helped make the anti-
apartheid documentary "Come Back Africa", filmed illegaly in South
Africa, with then-unknown Meriam Makeba, and we showed it at
mid-night screenings and at campus film clubs. Stokely Carmichael was a
year ahead of me at Bronx Science, and when we did anti-war marches
to Washington he and other Howard U students organized/joined us to
do sit-in's at still-segrated highway diners in Maryland. And I
could probably remember a lot more if I tried. Malcolm X spoke on
street corners in Harlem.
Select this to read [the Whole Story].