Sociocultural and professional identity of the generation of Soviet “baby-boomers” (on the materials of the deep interviews of the actors of the scientific and educational community of OmSPU)
Автор: Churkin M.K., Navoichik E. Yu., Chernenko E.V., Churkina N.I.
Журнал: Вестник Новосибирского государственного университета. Серия: История, филология @historyphilology
Рубрика: Российская история
Статья в выпуске: 1 т.21, 2022 года.
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Based on the methodological practice of oral history, as well as the method of in-depth interviews, the article reveals factors, content and results of the development of the socio-cultural and professional identity within the academic and teacher community consisting of the post-war generation born in 1943-1953. It establishes that markers of the identity of the generation include joint historical experience, models, and programs of socialization cultivated during the Soviet era, general life experience in the process of professional communication. When reconstructing the socio-cultural identity of baby boomers, the authors take into account the thesis, according to which the differentiation of generations is due to the experience of significant historical events, perceived as historical caesura. It also establishes that crises, scientific revolutions, socio-political innovations that influence many age groups are experienced differently in the certain phase of a certain generation. This study identifies the stages of the development of the communicative consent of the representatives of the baby boomer generation, the ethical principles of community contacts in the context of the socio-cultural background of the 2nd half of the 20th century. The authors pay particular attention to intergenerational communication, which defined the system of moral and ethical ideas of baby boomers, influenced the choice of strategies and practices of social behavior in the conditions of generally accepted norms of the USSR.
Baby-boomer generation, sociocultural and professional identity, social adaptation, communicative consent
Короткий адрес: https://sciup.org/147236270
IDR: 147236270 | DOI: 10.25205/1818-7919-2022-21-1-98-112