"Wild Ones: Containment Culture and 1950s Youth Rebellion"

Type of content
Theses / Dissertations
Publisher's DOI/URI
Thesis discipline
American Studies
Degree name
Doctor of Philosophy
Publisher
University of Canterbury. American Studies
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Language
Date
2007
Authors
Borrie, Lee Adam
Abstract

My study seeks to fill a void in Cold War historiography by situating the emergence of 1950s youth culture in the context of containment culture, evaluating the form and extent of youth's cultural 'rebellion'. The pervasive cultural discourse of 'containment', which operated as both a foreign policy to restrict the Soviet Union's sphere of influence and a domestic policy to stifle political dissent, mandated that America propagate an image of social harmony and political plurality during the early years of the Cold War. Yet the emergence of a rebellious youth culture in the middle of the 1950s challenges the notion that America was a 'consensus society' and exposes the limitations and fissures of the white middle class hegemony that the containment narrative worked to legitimate. In examining the rise of rock n roll, the emergence of the drive-in theatre as a "teen space," and the significance of "style" to the galvanization of 1950s youth culture, this study examines the ways in which youth culture of the period variously negotiated, resisted, and accommodated containment culture.

Description
Citation
Keywords
Cold War America, Youth Culture 1950s, Rock n Roll Music
Ngā upoko tukutuku/Māori subject headings
ANZSRC fields of research
Rights
Copyright Lee Adam Borrie