 The Counterculture's Whole Earth Movement and the 20th Century Alternative Health Interest Bernard Pyron
I have been aware that the 20th century alternative health movement had one point of its origin in the very late sixties and early seventies part of the counterculture which we called the "Whole Earth Movement," After the Whole Earth Catalog of that era.
I was in Madison, Wisconsin at that time and was familiar with the counterculture at the University of Wisconsin.
There were several movements then associated with the core counterculture, the hippies and the drug movement, such as the art bohemians, self psychology, feminism and the New Left.
So there were many people I knew in Madison who were influenced by the counterculture and its associated movements who were not hippies and did not use drugs, including myself.
The hippies were into sex, drugs and an anti-Christian attitude. But by 1970 there was that agrarian commune movement as part of the counterculture, which had young people going into the country and starting up communes. Of course, many of these people were not university people, that is, not those who had been students at the University of Wisconsin or Michigan. But some were university people and I was part of one network that included a smaller group, I call the Judy Anderson Group, who did live in a rural commune in northern Idaho in the seventies. I was never there.
In the early seventies I wrote a book called Forest Culture: Essays In Total Human Ecology, which was sold in several Madison places, including in the Whole Earth Coop on East Johnson Street. For a while I lived a couple of blocks away from the Whole Earth Coop. I lived on Lake Mendota.
The counterculture's back to the earth movement then included an emphasis on nutrition, on eating fresh vegetables and fruit, and on whole grains. It also was into some forms of food supplements, those available in health food stores back then. This is one of the few positive things of the counterculture.
It was one origin of the present alternative health movement.
http://www.avclub.com/madison/articles/the-spirits-of-madison-activism-show-up-in-sign-fo,40427/
"Madison Calendar Music/Film / Arts/City Life / Eat/Drink / Contests Back to A.V. National The spirits of Madison activism show up in sign form Read it and weep, Madison. by Mark Riechers
"Madison's status as a progressive bubble has long been tied to cultural hotspots scattered throughout the city. But unfortunately, many of these progressive institutions have completely vanished. So the Madison Museum Of Contemporary Art is presenting Milwaukee artist Nicolas Lampert's project, "Then And Again,” designed to memorialize these spaces by placing signs at six sites (on display from April 24-Sept. 26) remembering Madison institutions lost. The A.V. Club investigated a few of them to find out if the new tenants would please the ghosts of Madison activism."
"Whole Earth Co-op (817 East Johnson St.)
Like the other co-ops that sprang up around Madison in the '70s, Whole Earth emphasized local foods away from grocery store chains. Specifically focusing on self-reliant baking, selling home-ground flour, lentils, and oats, Whole Earth unfortunately closed in 1996 after volunteer support for the co-op dried up."
http://www.mmoca.org/aboutus/pressroom/NicolasLampertPR.php
"MADISON, WI"Drawing on the city's long tradition of politically charged graphic design in public settings, the Madison Museum of Contemporary Art presents Then and Again: A Public Project by Nicolas Lampert. The exhibition, comprised of six signs created by Lampert, will be on view in outdoor locations in Madison's downtown this spring and summer."
"Lampert's signs commemorate important institutions in Madison's recent history: Lysistrata Restaurant, Mifflin Street Co-op, Whole Earth Co-op... Each of these organizations contributed to the city's reputation for political and cultural activism. For example, the Whole Earth Co-op was one of the first institutions in the country to foster living in harmony with nature and the benefits of do-it-yourself resourcefulness."
"Many of these institutions represent Madison's counterculture of the 1960s and 1970s, which contributed to the city's informal status as the "Berkeley of the Midwest.” Then and Again reinvigorates interest in our collective past for individuals who knew these institutions, while also introducing them to a new generation.
Mifflin Street Co-op: 32 North Basset Street
Whole Earth Coop: 817 East Johnson Street."
My note: The Mifflin Street Co-op might have been an earlier model for the Whole Earth Coop. Both stores were counterculture-oriented and owned and run by counterculture people.
But the Mifflin Street Co-op was right in the heart of hippie-Madison and sold canned goods as well as bulk food. The Whole Earth Coop was almost on Lake Mendota, a little east of the Square and downtown Madison. In was in a little more upscale or less "ghetto" part of the city.
Paul Soglin famous former mayor of Madison wrote an intro to the history of the Mifflin Street Co-op:
http://www.waxingamerica.com/2006/05/history_of_the_.html
"The media always played up the colorful aspects of those times of turbulence and creative fertility: the drugs, the riots, the threatening new leaders, the perceived sexual freedoms and social nonchalance. But these images, while showing one side of what was going on, yield a stereotyped analysis of the sixties in our minds, an analysis that never attains much depth or profundity for those who lived through it. Those who didn't experience that era, tend to see a simplistic, over romanticized fairyland scenario that is either naively embraced or seen as naive itself."
"The sixties were a time of affluence. Jobs weren't as scarce as they are now. This made it easier for middle class students to dream, and attempt to realize their dreams...."
"The Mifflin Street Community Co-op is one of those projects which has an interesting history that reveals many sides of the sixties legacy: its flamboyance as well as its skilled, practical grass roots organizing, its visionary politics, vulnerable humanness, isolated idealism and blatant hucksterism."
"The cast of characters includes martyrs, hustlers, ordinary folks, drug addicts, police, students, rip-offs and businesspeople. Some had definite ideas, some were mostly confused, and not all of them might seem interesting. This series of articles on the co-op's history will attempt to review the co-op's stormy life, with an eye toward illuminating the strength and depth of the counterculture, as well as gaining increased understanding of both the co-op as a business and part of our community...."
In the seventies I used the Mifflin Steet Co-op every few days to buy much of my food, though at one point in that decade I lived next door to El Rancho supermarket on University Ave.
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