http://rabble.ca/books/reviews/2010/01/boomers-next-battle
In some ways perhaps we boomers have fallen short of our great
promise, but with The Making of an Elder Culture we are given a second chance
By Frank Preyde
January 21, 2010
The Making of an Elder Culture:
Reflections on the Future of America's Most Audacious Generation
by Theodore Roszak
(New Society Publishers, 2009; $18.95)
In 1989, Theodore Roszak published The Making of the Counter Culture,
a book which introduced to the world the Woodstock generation, the
summer of love and the summer of political protest. In his latest
book The Making of an Elder Culture: Reflections on the Future of
America's Most Audacious Generation. Roszak revisits the generation
he defined 40 years ago. This is definitely not a whimsical look at
the mad-cap excesses of the hippie generation or a nostalgic visit to
the first heady days of sex drugs and rock and roll. The author
focuses on the formidable strengths of the baby boomer generation,
reminds us of the significant accomplishments of our youth and
challenges us to again take up the good fight.
Roszak sees the forming of a productive elder culture within our
society not as a passing population bubble which shall pass into
history with the last boomer, but rather that older people will
become a much larger percentage of the population for the indefinite
future. He demonstrates this with a convincing demographic analysis.
Central to the theme of this book is that the idea of "elderly" is
reclaimed from the neo-conservative social model which sees the aged
as unproductive and a net social burden. From the latter part of the
last century the political right in America has tried to paint aging
boomers as a looming economic disaster as we selfishly spend the
fortune of our grandchildren on our own entitlements. Roszak counters
this, and posits a model of the elder more as it is found in the
traditional and natural societies where the elderly were the
reservoirs of a people's culture and accumulated wisdom, and a group
to be listened to with respect. In fact the boomer generation is
described in The Making of an Elder Culture as potentially the
vanguard of a potent and permanent social force. In comparing aging
boomers to social and revolutionary movements of the 20th century,
the author likens the very fact of our longevity as an unplanned and
unruled social revolution which is quietly defining the future.
The author sets high expectations, and notes "My hope is that the
people who grew up on J.D. Salinger's Catcher in the Rye, the poetry
of Alan Ginsberg, the folk music of Pete Seeger, the protest ballads
of Country Joe, the anarchic insolence of the Beatles and the Rolling
Stones, the biting satire of Mort Sahl and Lenny Bruce, the acid rock
of Bob Dylan, the sociology of Paul Goodman and Herbert Marcuse, the
Summer of Love and the Days of Rage, will not be content to spend
their retirement years on cruise ships or feeding their Social
Security income into slot machines at the nearest casino."
As a boomer of course I remember all that. Paul Goodman and Marcuse,
weren't they with the Paul Butterfield Blues Band? Or maybe it was
the Archies. In my more honest reflections on the youth I shared with
so many I recall a generation which was inordinately self absorbed
and allowed itself to be the most marketed to group in history. This
has only become worse over the years. The same ad agency weasels who
sold us everything from Che Guevara t-shirts to hash pipes are still
selling Viagra and Depends, and we're still buying. Roszak has set
the bar high for we boomers, but he reminds us of both our economic
might and the lofty ideals of our youth.
As an academic of international repute, Roszak has written a
thoroughly researched cerebral book, but it is written from the heart
and with conviction. It is a hard book to put down, and as an aging
boomer I found it to be exciting and optimistic. In some ways perhaps
we boomers have fallen short of our great promise, but with The
Making of an Elder Culture we are given a second chance.
It would seem that mine is not a generation which will go gently into
that good night.
--
Frank Preyde is an unrepentant product of the '60s, excesses and all,
who has never really left his youth. He currently works as a
community mental health worker in Toronto where he labours daily at
the rockface of the human experience.
.
1 comments:
Fully agree that we Boomers continue to define social expectations, redefine existing standards. Too often at this juncture, however, it isn't by design on our part, and that's to the detriment of all. Far more than aging alone, we have the power to change everything from the way this country cares for its citizens, to how we are percieved throughout the world....for better or worse.
I believe in our power, as a generation, but recognize its limitations based upon our own to recognize it.
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