Were there always teenagers, or did modern society invent them?
Pigweed and Crowhill explore the surprising history of adolescence and the emergence of the modern teenager. For most of human history, young people moved directly from childhood into adult responsibilities. They worked on farms, served on ships, fought in wars, and contributed to family life from an early age. So what changed?
The conversation traces the rise of the teenager as a distinct social category in the 20th century, examining the effects of compulsory education, child labor laws, postwar prosperity, automobiles, rock and roll, advertising, and mass marketing. Along the way, they discuss powder monkeys in the age of sail, Shakespeare’s view of life’s stages, James Dean, Elvis Presley, the generation gap, and the creation of a youth culture unlike anything that had existed before.
Pigweed and Crowhill also consider the unintended consequences of teen culture: peer groups replacing families as primary influences, prolonged adolescence, changing expectations about responsibility, and the modern tendency to celebrate youth rather than maturity. Was the rise of the teenager an inevitable result of prosperity and social change, or did we accidentally create a cultural phenomenon that now shapes society far more than we realize?
As always, the discussion begins with a beer review—this time featuring an Imperial Pilsner from Heavy Seas—and ends with a few reasons for cautious optimism about the next generation.
Topics discussed:
* The history of adolescence
* Child labor and compulsory education
* Teen culture in the 1950s
* Rock and roll and youth identity
* Marketing to teenagers
* Responsibility and maturity
* Generational change
* Modern youth culture
* Family vs. peer influence
* The future of young adulthood
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