The reason that the truthful representation
of events became so important during this period, especially in the US, was
down to the abhorrent actions of the state against students and minorities,
which was heavily publicised by the Black Panther movement. During this period,
the general consensus, that had previously backed the word of the state as
morally correct, shifted toward an extremely anti-establishment feeling,
seeking the truth that was hidden by a corrupt government.
This change in opinion is in no small part
due to the preceding world war, in which governments had been exposed as
majorly betraying human rights for their own personal gain, which again caused
a great sense of distrust toward establishment. From WWII, the development of
psychological experiments such as the Stanford prison experiment and those
before it, showed the transience of the human mind, and its ability to switch
massively causing supposedly morally impressive persons to perform acts of
heinous barbarity, the results of which showed how it was possible to get the
German people to commit the abhorrent crimes during WWII.
It is this mental transience that is
displayed in Thompson’s work, a notable example of which being Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas where,
through his description of the hallucinogenic effects of various substances,
Thompson draws attention to the fragility of our perception of the world as a
fixed and accurate representation of the world around us.
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