I found this book interesting for the similarities I could draw between the Lost Generation, the “Old Americana” per se, and our current era, the “New Americana”.
The widespread disillusion and loss of faith is obvious; people begin to rebel and revolt as a result of a growing feeling of learned helplessness. Fitzgerald describes the resilience of classic social structures such as class, romantic relations, and basic hierarchy but denotes that more social, cultural, and subjective, for a lack of better word, elements of society have begun to dissipate. There is a lack of respect for institutions, a desire to find ways around the law, and a dearth of unity, whether it be from cultural or a shared identity, present in the United States. For this period, the terrors of war and its trauma were the direct causes of such trends.
Yet, in our modern age where such phenomena continue, we see the root of the issues to be different: rather than being forcefully coerced and subjected into these phenomena, as were Americans during the Old Americana due to WW1 and the general political instability that plagued the world, we see that the modern age has grown a passivity and subsequent willingness to allow such a mindset to develop. As we fall victim to the addiction of devices, hyper connectivity, social media, globalization, etc., what we see is the willingness of individuals to accept simplification and ignore integral intricacies that underlie social structures. News media, reporting, journalism, and, quite frankly, truth have been diluted and adulterated by a willingness to submit to passivity in our modern age, in effect causing individuals to exude an analogous lack of respect, unity, and satisfaction that we witnessed during the Old Americana.
Interesting writing overall