Printed in the United States of America
Preface
In a recent survey, new college graduates listed history as the academic subject whose lessons they found of least use in their daily affairs. In part, this reflects the show-me pragmatism of today’s rising generation. Yet as America embarks on the 1990s, people of all ages feel a disconnection with history. Many have difficulty placing their own thoughts and actions, even their own lives, in any larger story. As commonly remembered, history is all about Presidents and wars, depressions and scandals, patternless deeds done by people with power far beyond what the typical reader can ever hope to wield. If history seems of little personal relevance today, then what we do today seems of equal irrelevance to our own lives (and the lives of others) tomorrow. Without a sense of trajectory, the future becomes almost random. So why not live for today? What’s to lose?
During the 1970s and 1980s, this today fixation has rumbled throughout American society, top to bottom. Our Presidents and Congresses have expressed a broad-based preference for consumption over savings, debt over taxes, the needs of elders over the needs of children. In our private lives, we have seen the same attitude reflected in parents-come-first family choices, adults-only condos, leveraged Wall Street buy-outs, and the live-fast, die-young world of inner-city drug dealers. All these actions are more of a piece than many of us may feel comfortable admitting.
We offer this book as an antidote. More fundamentally, we hope to give our reader a perspective on human affairs unlike anything available in the usual history and social science texts. Once you have read this book, we expect you will reflect differently on much that you see in yourself, your family, your community, and the nation. You may understand better how the great events of American history, from wars to religious upheavals, have affected the lifecycles of real people, famous and common, in high political offices and in ordinary families. You may also gain a better sense of how you and your peers fit into the ongoing story of American civilization—a long and twisting human drama that offers each generation a special role. Appreciating the rhythm of this drama will enable you to foresee much of what the future holds for your own lifecycle, as well as what it holds for your children or grandchildren after your own time has passed.
This book presents the “history of the future” by narrating a recurring dynamic of generational behavior that seems to determine how and when we participate as individuals in social change—or social upheaval. We say, in effect, that this dynamic repeats itself. This is reason enough to make history important: For if the future replays the past, so too must the past anticipate the future.
If you are a BOOMER, you know yours is, beyond doubt, an authentic generation. You will recognize the generational boundaries separating you from others (and, if born from 1943 through 1945, you are probably delighted that someone finally put you where you always knew you belonged). Unlike the G.I. generation, you have no trouble recognizing how other generations have personalities very different from your own. Unlike the Silent generation, you have never imagined being anything other than what you are. But the great comfort you derive from your own identity is precisely what makes your generation troubling in the eyes of others. Like the peers of John Winthrop or Ralph Waldo Emerson, you perceive that within your circle lies a unique vision, a transcendent principle, a moral acuity more wondrous and extensive than anything ever sensed in the history of mankind.
True, like a Herman Melville or an H. L. Mencken, you often loathe the narcissism and self-satisfaction of your peers. But that too is an important trait of your “Idealist” generational type. Possessing unyielding opinions about all issues, you judge your own peers no less harshly than you judge your elders and juniors. Either way, you may well appreciate that the time has come to move the Boomer discussion beyond the hippie-tumed-yuppie, Boomer-ashy hypocrite theme. Stripped to its fundamentals, your generation of rising adults is no more hypocritical than Thoreau at Walden Pond, or Jefferson Davis during his seven-year retreat into the Mississippi woods.
You may feel some disappointment in the Dan Quayles and Donald Trumps who have been among your first age-mates to climb life’s pyramid, along with some danger in the prospect of Boomer Presidents and Boomer-led Congresses farther down the road. Watching Franklin Pierce and Stephen Douglas, the peers of Lincoln and Lee felt much the same trepidation about their own generation— with reason, as history soon demonstrated. You may see in your peers a capacity for great wisdom, terrible tragedy, or perhaps just an insufferable pomposity. Over the centuries, Idealist generations like yours have produced more than their share of all three. Having lived just half a lifecycle, you probably find it hard to imagine that your generation may someday produce strong-willed leaders on a par with a Sam Adams or a Benjamin Franklin, a Douglas Mac Arthur or a Franklin Roosevelt. That’s not surprising. Idealist generations—quite the reverse of Civic generations—typically exert their most decisive influence on history late in life.
To understand how this happens, you need to step outside your inner absorption, take a look at like-minded ancestors, and understand the fateful connection between the Idealist lifecycle and the larger flow of events. Perhaps you already sense that your Boomer peers, for all their narcissism and parallel play, will someday leave a decisive mark on civilization quite unlike anything they have done up to now. Your intuition is correct. History suggests they will.
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Well have they? left a decisive mark on civilization, world affairs? This book was published in 1991 and took several years to put together (the 1980's) It was a seminal work, no one before had looked at history as these two men did. Alas since that time many others have come forth to proclaim their own brand of generational theory, plagiarists most of them, not having the original mindset as Strauss and Howe, not putting in the deep research they simply mixed and matched and quickly published a book hoping to cash in on the interest Generations... had generated. This is most obvious in the generational boundaries that have been altered to suit the modern authors "opinion" on what constitutes a turning but there are many other flaws in their work.
Perhaps if the book had been written in a different time, in a more honest era, then genuine men of science and history could have added to it in a constructive way, but that is not the era we live in. We live in the era of deceit, in the era where peer review is a sick joke, if it happens at all! We live in the era of the scam, the grift and the swindle where nothing is as it seems and where everyone has their hand out and their hands in your pocket. Naturally it is the love of money that drives all this corruption, a book in itself if you wanted to define it. The book Generations is a huge tome and I myself have read only small portions. I found it as an epub free online where I find most of my books. "Another scam" that avoids copyright. Thankfully I'm not a Boomer, else I'd have a deep moral aversion to acquiring such


