Children of the revolution (concept)

For other uses, see Children of the revolution.

Children of the revolution is a concept associated with the generation growing up after revolutionary activity. It refers to the first generation of persons born after a revolution. The children of the revolution are a blank slate on which the values of the revolution are imposed. Because the generation have no shared memory of the prior world they cannot compare the new system with the old and will uncritically accept the new system as the natural order.

The phrase usually refers to political revolutions,[1] but is also applied to revolutions in culture, science, or art.

References

  1. e.g.: Kozal, J. 1978. Children of the Revolution, Delacorte Press.

http://eprints.lse.ac.uk/4634/1/Children_of_the_Revolution.pdf http://www.chathamhouse.org/publications/twt/archive/view/166817


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