Thursday, May 30, 2019
Stereotypes and Stereotyping - I Was a Teenage Hippie Essay -- Example
  Stereotyping - I Was a Teenage Hippie   Imagine a 17-year-old kid. He is five feet eleven inches tall, weighs 180  lbs., with very long  pig and a beard. His hair parts in the middle and stops at  his waist, meaning his hair is about three and a half feet long. He dresses not  for the fashion of the day, but with old standards blue jeans and a flannel  shirt in the winter or blue jeans and a short sleeve shirt in the summer.  Generally, his shirts in summer are T-shirts, typically with some provocative  text or an advertisement for a rock group. That kid was me in 1974.   I was the stereotypical  hipster, and my social circle during that year and  the four years preceding it (two of those years in middle school and two years  in high school) included other hippies. The hippie subculture has often been  subject to a stereotyped image  over the years. The image identified with the  hippie is one of an individual that is generally unclean and unkempt, usually  lives in squalor   , has a drug habit, and is not very smart. Of course, male  members of the hippie subculture all had long hair. Though the conservatives  stereotyped me and my friends by what they saw, they did not know a single thing  about us.   The group I was involved with socially was made up of eight other guys  besides myself and two girls, but the eleven of us were known by our peers as  The Dirty Dozen. We were looked upon by the conservatives in our town as being  just a bunch of damn hippies. Obviously, The Dirty Dozen was stereotyped  because of our appearance. Indeed, it would have been easy for any of us to   transpose our image to something more socially acceptable. For example, cutting my  air, shaving off my beard, and changing my...  ...day. I find myself not being so quick to judge by looks alone.  I find myself consciously thinking that I should not stereotype what I see  before me. I do not know the  psyche I only know the image. I certainly do not  want to consider myself    so narrow minded that I engage in the very behavior  displayed by the conservatives in the 1960s and 1970s.    Because of the tendency of  spate to stereotype others, I hold the belief  that I would be subject to stereotyping today.  age I maintain views that might  be politically incorrect and continue to hold dear a bit of the non-conforming  attitude embraced by the hippie subculture, would people guess that to look at  me today? Considering my conservative image today, would people guess that on  the inside I might still be a hippie? Or would they look at me and see me as a  boring old fart conservative yuppie?                  
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