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224 pages, Hardcover
First published January 1, 2004
What starts with an intended loud and polemic description of our society, changes into a fascinating and thrilling tale about how the baby boomers and following generations will change the image and function of the retirees in the coming decades. Very interesting for who is anywhere between 40 and 60 I guess - and, none the less still feeling young, deals with symptoms of a midlife crisis.
Great book, especially in the second half of it. I found it inspiring, when Schirrmacher looks at the bigger picture, pointing out that the aging society is a very recent phenomenon. The generations born after 1950 experienced security, were fed and nurtured like no other generation before. These post war generations are distinguished from older generations like zoo animals from their counterparts in the wilderness. The phenomenon of the aging society runs against the biological and cultural imprint of hundreds of thousands of years of evolution. Before 1950, aging always was an individual triumph over an early death, the privilege of survival. The natural aging process, as a unnatural collective experience, grows into one of the biggest challenges for the contemporary society.