For a generation dominated by the individualistic attitude, it
is not unnatural that the living moment should loom larger than
all time. The result is that, being cut off from the long
process that has given us all our human values, we now tend to
become provincials in time. Just as the provincial in the usual
geographic and social sense judges all things by the prevailing
conceptions of his province, scorning the larger world, so do we
now tend more and more to appraise our own literary products
solely in the light that is peculiar to our agitated moment. The
attempt to render absolute judgments with only the data of a
limited reference scheme has always been the supreme tragedy (or
is it comedy?) of human thought.
--John G. Neihardt. The Giving Earth (1991)