Coming of Age in Times of Uncertainty. Harry Blatterer

Coming of Age in Times of Uncertainty - Harry Blatterer


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       COMING OF AGE IN TIMES OF UNCERTAINTY

      Harry Blatterer

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      First published in 2007 by

       Berghahn Books www.berghahnbooks.com

      ©2007, 2009 Harry Blatterer

       First paperback edition published in 2009

      First ebook edition published in 2012

      All rights reserved.

       Except for the quotation of short passages

       for the purposes of criticism and review, no part of this book

      may be reproduced in any form or by any means, electronic or

      mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or any information

      storage and retrieval system now known or to be invented,

      without written permission of the publisher.

       Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

      Blatterer, Harry.

      Coming of age in times of uncertainty / Harry Blatterer.

      p. cm.

      Includes bibliographical references and index.

      ISBN 1–84545–285–2 (hardback : alk. paper) -- 978-1-84545-628-3 (paperback : alk. paper) -- 978-0-85745-531-4 (ebook) 1. Adulthood. 2. Social role. 3. Life cycle, Human. I. Title.

      HQ799.95.B56 2007

      305.2409172'2—DC22 2006036156

       British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data

      A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library

      ISBN: 978-1-84545-285-8 hardback, 978-1-84545-628-3 paperback, 978-0-85745-531-4 ebook

       For Maria and Mira

       CONTENTS

       PREFACE

       ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

       INTRODUCTION

       1 REPRESENTATIONS OF ADULTHOOD

       2 ADULTHOOD, INDIVIDUALIZATION, AND THE LIFE COURSE

       3 ADULTHOOD AND SOCIAL RECOGNITION

       4 FROM ADULTHOOD AS A GOAL TO YOUTH AS A VALUE

       5 NEW ADULT VOICES I

       The Meaning of Adulthood

       6 NEW ADULT VOICES II

       Without a Center that Holds

       7 CONCLUSION

       Redefining Adulthood

       EPILOGUE

       NOTES

       BIBLIOGRAPHY

       INDEX

       PREFACE

       Peter Beilharz

      The new individualism presents itself to us as a serious problem, and challenge. The main reason for this is obvious. There does seem to be a weakening of ties, a corrosion of loyalty, an acceleration of time, an increasing emphasis on looking out for number one. Sometimes this care still extends to looking after a family, but now the idea of the family is also increasingly uncertain, open to dissolution and renewal. If I can make my family anew, at short notice, then there is really only me, the individual, as a core unit or reality.

      Leading intellectual trends such as communitarianism and critical theory have staked a claim to blowing the whistle on these trends. They have long identified surplus individualism, or narcissism, as a major problem in the West. Perhaps this was best brought out into the sixties, by the me-generation and its chronic self-absorption, self-obsession. This line of criticism was confirmed by writers like Lasch and Sennett in the US, and later by Bauman in Europe. Here the markers are apparent. There seems to be a loss of telos, or project, for many ordinary citizens in everyday life. The moment becomes all consuming, and immediate gratification becomes overwhelming. Huxley warned us about this is Brave New World in 1932 already. Changed conceptions of time would lead to reduced or diminished social commitments. Prolonged adolescence would bring with it postponed adulthood. Nobody seems to want to grow up any more, especially not the young.

      Yet we behave like children, us adults too. Perhaps it is rather the case that the me-generation never stopped, just kept expanding. From a properly sociological perspective, it now seems that there was a Golden Age life course—a pattern of habits and expectations unique to the period of the postwar boom. Here there was a standard life-course, standardized expectations for men, women, and children, one size fits all, and these senses expanded conceptually until we had normalized them. Certainly one historically unique aspect of the postwar period was the expansion of youth and youth culture; and this is why we need today to match the idea of new individualism with that of new adults.

      Communitarianism and critical theory are always open to the criticism of nostalgia, and this indeed is legitimate. For these are intellectual traditions whose purpose is the critique of modernity, and with it the critique of the idea of progress. Yet constant vigilance is also called for here; we cannot simply presume that it was always better in the past, and in fact most of us do not believe this in terms of our everyday sensibilities and dispositions.

      Harry Blatterer's contribution in this book is brilliantly to work this interface between radical critique of the present and affirmation of its actually existing contents. This brilliant book is an invitation to contemplation and conversation, not least between us, close to middle age, and our children, our students. It is elegant, beautifully written, engaging, reflexive, an exemplary sociology of everyday life.

      Blatterer starts from the premise that adulthood is an invisible concept, or


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