Posterity Lost: Progress, Ideology, and the Decline of the American FamilyRowman & Littlefield Publishers, 1997 - 353 páginas Has the American spirit of optimism disappeared? This original and provocative book provides a penetrating analysis of two developments which are revolutionizing late 20th century America. The decline of the American family and a waning faith in the Idea of Progress are in sharp contrast to our historic past. Richard T. Gill links these two significant developments by examining our changing attitudes to the future. Americans today increasingly focus on the short term instead of the long view, and the losers in this myopic process are both the family, which is responsible for rearing the future generation, and the Idea of Progress, which once guaranteed that future generations would enjoy increasingly happy and productive lives. Posterity Lost provides a thought-provoking examination of these disturbing developments and offers some hopeful suggestions for their reversal. |
Contenido
Family Breakdown | 11 |
Breakdown | 33 |
Why Conventional Explanations Are Incomplete | 61 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 15 secciones no mostradas
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Posterity Lost: Progress, Ideology, and the Decline of the American Family Richard T. Gill Vista previa limitada - 1997 |
Posterity Lost: Progress, Ideology, and the Decline of the American Family Richard Thomas Gill Vista de fragmentos - 1997 |
Posterity Lost: Progress, Ideology, and the Decline of the American Family Richard Thomas Gill Vista de fragmentos - 1997 |
Términos y frases comunes
actually agnosticism analysis attitudes Baby Boom basic behavior believe Boomers certainly chapter child clearly course cultural day care decades decline divorce economic effect example fact faith family breakdown family values fathers fundamental predicament growth happen human Idea of Progress illegitimacy income increase increasingly Industrial Industrial Revolution infants institution interest involved labor force latchkey kids least less living long-run major marriage married matter ment moral relativism mothers nature never-married nineteenth and early nineteenth century nomic one's Parental Bill particular past percent period population possible posterity predicament of progress present problem process of progress prog psychological question recent ress revolution role sense single-parent social society specific stepfamilies suggest technological teenage tend things tion today's trend ultimately United Victorian Victorian morality Wall Street Journal welfare women World War II York young