- 256 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
What Did the Baby Boomers Ever Do For Us?
About This Book
The first of those born in the baby boom following the Second World War came of age in the radical sixties. Not since 1918 had the young talked serious revolutionary politics as they did then. But in 1918, the men who came back from the war knew that the world was amiss, and what they had to do about it. When at last the generation that fought the Great War came to power, they changed the world. By contrast, the generation that came after decayed fast. For the first time since the Second World War, there was money, there was safe sex, there was freedom, and no one bothered to stop and remember the price earlier generations had paid for this. Most of them hardly realised the privations of their parents, and the struggle that had taken place to ensure that they were not equally deprived. What began as the most radical-sounding generation for half a century turned into a random collection of youthful style gurus, sharp-toothed entrepreneurs and management consultants who believed revolution meant new ways of selling things; and Thatcherites, who thought freedom meant free markets, not free people. At last it found its most complete expression in New Labour, which had no idea what either revolution or freedom meant, but rather liked the sound of the words. While the philosophy of the sixties seemed progressive at the time, the baby boomers we remember are not the political reformers, but the millionaires. In What Did the Baby Boomers Ever Do for Us? Francis Beckett argues that the children of the '60s betrayed the generations that came before and after, and that the true legacy of the swinging decade is ashes.
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Table of contents
- Cover
- Title Page
- Table of Contents
- Author’s note and acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1. How the baby boomers got their freedom: 1945–51
- 2. When we were very young: 1950–56
- 3. The cradle of the sixties: 1956
- 4. The baby boomers go to school
- 5. What if Mr Macmillan’s out? 1957–63
- 6. The very model of a modern fluent technocrat: 1964–67
- 7. The end of the adventure: 1968
- 8. How the baby boomers destroyed the trade unions and made Thatcherism: 1969–79
- 9. The radical conservatives: 1979–97
- 10. The baby boomer Prime Ministers: 1994–2010
- 11. The children of the baby boomers
- Notes
- Index
- Copyright