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A Generation in Politics: A Definition

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 August 2009

Extract

C. p. snow suggests that it is a short way to the grave for individual human beings, but the life of society can be made immortal. Many of the groups to which we belong, of which we are conscious, and to which we feel a sense of allegiance, such as our nation and our class, may indeed survive for centuries or longer. There is, however, one group to which we belong that need not fear immortality: our generation. If, as has sometimes been argued, it is the sense of a common destiny which unites all Frenchmen and all Germans, all members of the working class and of the middle class, surely no shared destiny is more fundamental than that of members of the same generation. These members have in common, not necessarily language or income, but the agonies and triumphs of life itself. If the ability to communicate helps to define membership in a group, surely our generation exists both as an objective reality and, in human motivations, even more important, as a personal commitment. This ability to communicate is shared by our generation, but at the same time we are cut off from other generations. Some things we can share only with others of our own age. Even if, by some quirk of fate, we should wish to evade our destiny as members of a generation, we cannot. Anyone who tries to escape from his generation is faced with cold hard reality: “You belong to it, too.… You came along at the same time. You can't get away from it. You're a part of it whether you want to be or not.”

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © University of Notre Dame 1963

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References

1 The New Men (New York, 1954), p. 301Google Scholar.

2 Two very different kinds of comments illustrate this point: “The age of the important others as related to your own age is not merely a matter of age; but of race, nationality, social class, social status, sex, and a host of other variables. But the world is different for persons of different age and generation even if they share in common, sex, class, and nationality, and occupation.” Strauss, Anselm L., Mirrors and Masks: The Search for Identity (Glencoe, Illinois, 1959), p. 138Google Scholar. “The keyboard of environment on which coevals must play the sonata apassionata of their lives is in its fundamental structure one and the same.” Gasset, José Ortega y, Man and Crisis (translated by Adams, Mildred, New York, 1958), p. 44Google Scholar.

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11 It is certainly an extreme overstatement to argue: “The history, political style, and future development of a political community reflect the quality of the relationship between fathers and sons.” Lane, Robert E., “Fathers and Sons: Foundations of Political Belief,” American Sociological Review, XXIV, No. 4 (08, 1959), 511Google Scholar.

12 The latter describes his own agonizing reappraisal during his early twenties: “My father's tone of thought and feeling, I now felt myself at a great distance from: greater, indeed, than a full and calm explanation and reconsideration on both sides, might have shown to exist in reality. But my father was not one with whom calm and full explanations on fundamental points of doctrine could be expected, at least with one whom he might consider as, in some sort, a deserter from his standard.… I expected no good, but only pain to both of us, from discussing our differences: and I never expressed them but when he gave utterance to some opinion of feeling repugnant to mine, in a manner which would have made it disingenuousness on my part to remain silent.” Autobiography of John Stuart Mill (New York, 1924), p. 126Google Scholar.

13 This assumption is made even by so cautious an observer as Lehman, Harvey C., Age and Achievement (Princeton, 1953), p. 330Google Scholar.

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15 One author apparently sees the generations approach as arguing that “… as the age-basis of commitment wanes, so will the commitment itself.” Berger, Bennett M., “How Long is a Generation?” The British Journal of Sociology, XI, No. 1 (03, 1960), 17Google Scholar. Generations advocates argue precisely the opposite: that the commitment does not wane through time.

16 Whether this same political attitude will appear liberal under radically changed circumstances is, of course, uncertain. It is quite possible that much of the confusion in the political vocabulary of any nation is due to the different meanings given to the same term by members of different generations. Herbert Hoover's liberalism, for instance, is still very real to him, even though younger generations in American politics consider liberalism to have a social rather than an individualistic connotation. Whether a political leader or follower ought to change his vocabulary to suit the needs (or possibly whims) of a changed situation is outside the scope of this study. It is perhaps worth noting, however, that in explaining the tenacity of “outmoded” policies, a generations approach to politics removes these policies from the realm of free choice, from the realm of moral judgments. In this respect, a generations approach has the same weaknesses and strengths as any other determinist approach.

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36 The impact on European politics of the loss of millions of members of the war generation is a matter of great significance, especially with respect to political leadership, but it is not immediately relevant here. Suffice it to say that several decades later the war dead were sorely missed, when it came time for their generation to assume political leadership.

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