James Dean, Elvis Presley, and Allen Ginsberg were all popular with youth in the 1950s. What did they represent?
Answers
Answered by
3
They represented the new form of music then created: Rock and Roll
Answered by
2
All the three of them spoke to the grasp of machismo by standard society, yet they were each related to three totally extraordinary things.
James Dean spoke to a male teenager in his motion pictures who was exceptionally uncertain of himself, however, all things considered, was worshiped by numerous female fans.
Elvis Presley utilized numerous explicitly provocative moves to pull in numerous females and Allen Ginsberg tested the manner in which homosexuality was seen in a very machismo society.
Similar questions