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In Our Prime

The Invention of Middle Age

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
From the New York Times reporter whose beat is culture and ideas
comes a fascinating, revelatory, and timely social history of the
concept of middle age. For the first time ever, the middle-aged make up
the biggest, richest, and most influential segment of the country, yet
the history of middle age has remained largely untold. This important
and immensely readable book finally fills the gap.
In Our Prime is
a biography of the idea of middle age from its invention in the late
nineteenth century to its current place at the center of American
society, where it shapes the way we view our families, our professional
obligations, and our inner lives. Patricia Cohen ranges over the entire
landscape of midlife, exploring how its biological, psychological, and
social definitions have shifted from one generation to the next. Middle
age has been a symbol both of decline and of power and wealth.
Explaining why, Cohen takes readers from early-twentieth-century
factories that refused to hire middle-aged men to twenty-first-century
high-tech laboratories where researchers are currently conducting
cutting-edge experiments on the middle-aged brain and body.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      October 10, 2011
      Those between the ages of 40 and 64 make up one-third of the U.S. population and control almost 70% of its net worth, making them the largest, wealthiest, and most influential segment of the country. Yet, as Cohen, a cultural reporter for the New York Times, shows, the idea of middle age is a relatively recent concept that emerged during America’s industrialization and urbanization; migrations to cities resulted in age- and occupation-related—not familiar—groupings. Tracing the “invention” of middle age alongside technological and scientific breakthroughs, this witty and engaging study synthesizes history, psychology, and the latest scientific research on the “middle-aged brain.” Cohen looks at the industries that have sprouted to understand and market to this cohort—the current ad campaigns and TV shows targeting the “alpha boomers,” who collectively spend more than $1.8 trillion annually—and how the new group has changed society, through readings of Carl Jung and Erik Erickson, whose work recognized middle age as a critical period of human life; the evolving attitudes toward middle-aged women; and the forces of self-improvement and mass consumption—hormone therapies, anti-aging drugs, plastic surgery—that contribute to the “Midlife Industrial Complex.” This comprehensive and entertaining social history highlights the possibilities of the middle years—and shows how middle age reflects the attitudes and customs of each generation that passes through it.

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Languages

  • English

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