A Casey Research interview with Neil
Howe, co-author of The Fourth Turning
The Fourth Turning is an amazingly prescient book Neil Howe
wrote with the late William Strauss in 1997. The work, which describes
generational archetypes and the cyclical patterns created by these
archetypes, has been an eye-opener to anyone able to entertain the
notion that history may repeat itself. At the time the book was
published, the Boston Globe stated, “If Howe and Strauss are right,
they will take their place among the great American prophets.” Read
this visionary interview published in
The Casey Report, and see for yourself.
DAVID GALLAND: Could you provide us a quick
introduction to generational research?
NEIL HOWE: We think that generations move
history along and prevent society from suffering too long under the
excesses of any particular generation. People often assume that every
new generation will be a linear extension of the last one. You know,
that after Generation X comes Generation Y. They might further expect
Generation Y to be like Gen X on steroids – even more willing to take
risk and with even more edginess in the culture. Yet the Millennial
Generation that followed Gen X is not like that at all. In fact, no
generation is like the generation that immediately precedes it.
Instead, every generation turns the corner
and to some extent compensates for the excesses and mistakes of the
midlife generation that is in charge when they come of age. This is
necessary, because if generations kept on going in the same direction
as their predecessors, civilization would have gone off a cliff
thousands of years ago.
So this is a necessary process, a process
that is particularly important in modern nontraditional societies,
where generations are free to transform institutions according to
their own styles and proclivities.
In our research we have found that, in
modern societies, four basic types of generations tend to recur in the
same order.
DAVID: The four generational archetypes. Can
you provide a sketch of each for those of our readers unfamiliar with
your work?
HOWE: Absolutely.
The first is what we call the Hero
archetype. Hero generations are usually protectively raised as kids.
They come of age at a time of emergency or Crisis and become known as
young adults for helping society resolve the Crisis, hopefully
successfully. Once the Crisis is resolved, they become institutionally
powerful in midlife and remain focused on outer-world challenges and
solutions. In their old age, they are greeted by a spiritual
Awakening, a cultural upheaval fired by the young. This is the typical
life story of a Hero generation.
One example of the Hero archetype is the G.I.
Generation, the soldiers of World War II, who became an institutional
powerhouse after the war and then in old age confronted the young
hippies and protesters of the 1960s. Going back in American history,
we have seen many other Hero archetypes, for example the generation of
Thomas Jefferson, and James Madison, and President Monroe. These were
the heroes of the American Revolution, who in old age were greeted by
the second Great Awakening and a new youth generation of fiery
Prophets.
After the Hero archetype comes the Artist
archetype. Artist generations have a very different location in
history -- they are the children of the Crisis. For Hero generations,
child protection rises from first cohort to last. By the time Artists
come along, child protection reaches suffocating levels. Artists come
of age as young adults during the post-Crisis era, when conformity
seems like the best path to success, and they tend to be collectively
risk averse. Artists see themselves as providing the expertise and
refinement that can both improve and adorn the enormous new
institutional innovations that have been forged during the Crisis.
They typically experience a cultural Awakening in midlife, and their
lives speed up as the culture transforms.
A great example of the Artist archetype is
the so-called “Silent” Generation, the post World War II young adults
who married early and moved into gleaming new suburbs in the 1950s,
went through their midlife crises in the ‘70s and ‘80s, and are today
the very affluent, active seniors retiring into gated lifestyle
communities.
The third archetype is what we call a
Prophet archetype. The most recent example of this archetype is
the Baby Boom Generation. Prophet generations grow up as children
during a period of post-Crisis affluence and come of age during a
period of cultural upheaval. They become moralistic and
values-obsessed midlife leaders and parents, and as they enter old
age, they steer the country into the next great outer-world social or
political Crisis. Boomers, for example, grew up during the Postwar
American High, came of age during the Consciousness Revolution of the
1960s and ‘70s, and are now entering old age.
Finally there is what we call a Nomad
archetype. Nomads are typically raised as children during Awakenings,
the great cultural upheavals of our history. Whereas the Prophet
archetype is indulgently raised as children, the Nomad archetype is
underprotected and completely exposed as children. They learn early
that they can’t trust basic institutions to look out for their best
interests and come of age as free agents whose watchword is
individualism. They are the great realists and pragmatists in our
nation's history.
The most recent example of the Nomad
archetype is Generation X. This generation grew up during the social
turmoil of the 1960s and ‘70s and are now beginning to enter midlife.
They are the ones that know how to get things done on the ground. They
are the stay-at-home dads and security moms trying to give their kids
more of a childhood than they themselves had. Their burden is that
they tend not to trust large institutions and do not have a strong
connection to public life. They forge their identity and value system
by “going it alone” and staying off the radar screen of government. It
could be very interesting to see the rest of the life story of this
generation, particularly as they take over leadership positions.
DAVID: Could you tell us the general age
ranges of these archetypes now?
HOWE: One Hero generation that is alive
today is the G.I. Generation, born between 1901 and 1924. They came of
age with the New Deal, World War II, and the Great Depression. They
are today in their mid-80s and beyond, and their influence is waning.
Today’s other example of a Hero archetype is
the Millennial Generation, born from 1982 to about 2003 or 2004. These
are today's young people, who are just beginning to be well known to
most Americans. They fill K-12 schools, colleges, graduate schools,
and have recently begun entering the workplace. We associate them with
dramatic improvements in youth behaviors, which are often
underreported by the media. Since Millennials have come along, we’ve
seen huge declines in violent crime, teen pregnancy, and the most
damaging forms of drug abuse, as well as higher rates of community
service and volunteering. This is a generation that reminds us in many
respects of the young G.I.s nearly a century ago, back when they were
the first boy scouts and girl scouts between 1910 and 1920.
DAVID: Then following the Hero, we have the
Artist, right?
HOWE: Yes. As I mentioned earlier, one
example of that archetype is the Silent Generation, born between 1925
and 1942. This generation was too young to remember anything about
America before the Great Crash of 1929, and too young to be of
fighting age during World War II.
That 1925 birth year is filled with people
like William F. Buckley and Bobby Kennedy, first-wave Silent who just
missed World War II. Many of them were actually in the camps in
California waiting for the invasion of Japan when they heard that the
war was over. Part of their generational experience is that sense of
just barely missing something big. Surveys show that this generation
does not like to call themselves “senior citizens.” They did not fight
in World War II. They did not build the A bomb. They are more like
“senior partners.” Unlike G.I.s, they are flexible elders, focused on
the needs of others. Many of them are highly engaged in the family
activities of their children and grandchildren. In politics, they are
today’s elder advisors, not powerhouse leaders.
There is a new generation of the Artist
archetype just now beginning to arrive. They started being born, we
think, around 2004 or 2005. We did a contest on our website to choose
a name for this new generation, and the winner was Homeland
Generation, reflecting the fact that they are being incredibly well
protected. So we are tentatively calling them the Homelanders.
This generation will have no memory of
anything before the financial meltdown of 2008 and the events that are
about to unfold in America. If our research is correct, this
generation’s childhood will be a time of urgency and rapid historical
change. Unlike the Millennials, who will remember childhood during the
good times of 1980s and ‘90s, the Homelanders will recall their
childhood as a time of national crisis.
So, those are the two examples today of the
Hero archetype, and two examples of the Artist archetype.
DAVID: What about the Prophet and the Nomad
generations?
HOWE: There is only one Prophet archetype
generation alive today: the Boomer Generation. We define them as being
born between 1943 and 1960. Those born in 1943 would have been part of
the free-speech movement at Berkeley in 1964, the first fiery class
whose peers include Bill Bradley, Newt Gingrich, and Oliver North. The
last cohorts of this generation came of age with President Carter in
the Iran Hostage Crisis.
For the Nomad archetype, we again have only
one example alive today, and that is Generation X. We define Gen Xers
as being born between 1961 and 1981. Actually, there may be a few
members of the earlier Nomad generation still around – those of the
Lost Generation born from 1883 to 1900, but today they would be around
110. This was the generation that grew up during the third Great
Awakening, the doughboys who went through World War I. They were the
generation that put the “roar” into the “Roaring ‘20s” – the rum
runners, barnstormers, and entrepreneurs of that period. They were big
risk-takers.
DAVID: Is the Millennial Generation the next
group up in terms of controlling or being a powerful force in society?
HOWE: It depends what you mean by a powerful
force in society.
DAVID: Who is going to be in the driver's
seat?
HOWE: Let me put it this way. The generation
that is about to be in the driver's seat in terms of leadership is
Generation X, the group born 1961 to 1981. In fact, we now have our
first Gen-X President, Barack Obama, who was born in 1961 and who is
in every way a Gen Xer, despite being born at the very early edge of
his generation. His fragmented family upbringing, with his father
leaving while he was young and his mother moving all over the world,
is typical of the Gen X life story. A telling anecdote from his
biography is that, when he arrived at Columbia University, he spent
his first night in New York sleeping in an alley because no one had
arranged to have an apartment open for him.
His life story has a “dazed and confused”
aspect. He made his own way against a background of adult neglect and
lack of structure. It’s interesting that he is the first leader in
America to call himself “post-Boomer.” As a matter of fact, he talks
regularly about how he intends to put an end to everything
dysfunctional about Boomer politics: the polarization, the culture
wars, the scorched-earth rhetoric, the identity politics, all of that.
I understand a lot of people do not believe he can actually do this,
but it’s interesting that this is the rhetoric he chooses. That
rhetoric is one reason why the vast majority of Millennials voted for
him.
Obama is the opening wedge of Gen Xers who
will assume very high leadership posts. They are not yet the senior
generals in control of the military, but they are taking over the
reins of government and, of course, the top spots in American
businesses.
If you want to know what Neil Howe foresees
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