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The Lucky Few: Researcher shines light on Forgotten
Generation
Newswise — John McCain, Elvis
Presley, Gloria Steinem and Martin Luther
King Jr. took different paths in life, but
they were all lucky.
That’s because they were born
between 1929 and 1945, a generation
sandwiched between the Greatest Generation
and the Baby Boom that Florida State
University Professor Elwood Carlson has
dubbed “The Lucky Few.”
“It’s an entire generation
that’s been lost in the shuffle, and it’s a
generation that’s very different from the
one before it and the one after,” said
Carlson, the Charles B. Nam Professor in
Sociology of Population. “It’s also the
first generation that is smaller than the
one before it.”
In a new book, “The Lucky
Few: Between the Greatest Generation and the
Baby Boom” (Springer), Carlson argues that
41 million Americans who were born during
the 16-year period that began with the crash
of the stock market and ended with the
conclusion of World War II were blessed by
the virtue of their comparatively small
numbers and the fortunate timing of world
events.
Their childhoods were marked
by the Great Depression and wartime rations,
but by the time members of this generation
came of age, the postwar economy was
booming, jobs were plentiful and educational
opportunities were abundant.
The Lucky Few hopped on the
gravy train with the explosion of
white-collar jobs in the 1950s and continued
to ride it right into retirement, Carlson
said.
“Because of their childhoods,
they had really low expectations,” Carlson
said. “But after the war, those tough times
evaporated and the reality exceeded their
expectations, so they felt really lucky.”
And for good reason. Their
transition to adulthood was early, fast and
easy. Although a military draft was still in
place, most, like Elvis, served in
peacetime.
They were able to take
advantage of veteran’s benefits -- such as a
college education under the GI Bill -- while
suffering only a fraction of the casualties
of the “Greatest Generation.”
Throughout adulthood, they
experienced the longest continuous economic
boom in the country. They had the highest
employment rates of any generation, and they
contributed to the rise of corporate America
and its accompanying perks. They pioneered
the trend of early retirement.
Their economic success fueled
social changes as well, Carlson said.
Members of this generation married younger
and started families sooner, not because of
changing mores, but because they could
afford to do it.
Of course, some -- namely
white men -- were luckier than others. But
even blacks and women fared better than
their counterparts in the generation that
preceded them, Carlson said.
Their prosperity afforded
them opportunities to become trailblazers
throughout their lives. Members of this
generation traveled to the moon, championed
civil rights and saw one of their own --
Sandra Day O’Connor -- become the first
woman appointed to the U.S. Supreme Court.
Now between the ages of 63
and 79, members of this generation are still
on a winning streak, according to Carlson,
who at 58 counts himself among the baby
boomers.
“They are still fortunate,”
he said. “They’re healthier, living longer
and retiring earlier while the younger
generations pay for their Social Security
benefits.”
Carlson said he was inspired
to research this generation and its
characteristics after requiring his students
to read “Birth and Fortune: The Impact of
Numbers on Personal Welfare” by Richard
Easterlin. Easterlin’s book argues that the
number of people born in a generation
directly and indirectly affects personal
destiny and the economy in general.
While Easterlin used his
theory to focus mainly on the negative
pressures facing the 78 million baby boomers
-- unemployment, high crime, marital stress
and divorce -- Carlson saw an opportunity to
explore the positive circumstances that
shaped the lives of the first “baby bust”
generation in America.
“No matter who you are, you
can define yourself as part of a
generation,” he said. “The circumstances of
your generation may help make sense of the
way your life has gone. You can see the
broader currents that have shaped your life.
The Lucky Few just happened to have a
smoother ride.”
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