This really is getting interesting.
In 1992 I had one of the highlights of my career. I gave a four-part lecture series at the United States Air Force Academy which combined two of my greatest passions, chess and history. For my efforts, I received a nice stipend and an even better letter of thanks from the Academy. 8)
My basic thesis was that modern (around 1850-present) chess development has mirrored the changes in culture in the Industrial and Post-Industrial Age. I explained why historians like to create periods, and how, despite their being artificial, these periods are useful for understanding general trends. My main audience was chess players, but students of history also attended.
I broke the development of modern chess history into the following segments:
(All periods are approximations, and yes, there is overlap)
I. The Romantics (Morphy to Steinitz)
II. The Scientific, or Modern Era (Steinitz-Lasker)
III. The Classical School (Rubinstein-Capablanca)
IV. The Hypermodern Era (Nimzovich-Alekhin)
V. The Soviet School (dynamic chess) (WWII to 1960s)
VI. The Neo-classical school (a.k.a The Fischer Era)
VII The Age of Professional Chess (The Karpov Era)
VIII Neo-Romantic Chess (Kasparov)
IX: The Age of Computer Chess.
(I actually had the foresight to pick out Vladimir Kramnik as the poster child for this era that we are still in)
I tried to show that society creates culture, and Kasparov's chess style could not have been anticipated by the Hypermoderns any more than a Paul Morphy could somehow be transplanted to our time and be expected to rise above a normal GM level. It isn't just a matter of learning openings, the entire culture of chess has changed.
I argued that today is the Golden Age of Chess, and in a generation or so, Chess will either have to go through a radical change or it will be superceded in popular culture by other activities. Young and talented players will begin to realise that they will never be as good as the best computers and find other ways to challenge themselves intellectually.
One of my unstated conceits included using very similar openings over time to show how they had been interpreted. So for example, I demonstrated Botvinnik-Capablanca 1938 as the triumph of the Dynamic school, and used Nimzo-Indian set-ups to represent the best play of several other eras.
I also hinted that the main engine for change was the way great chess players constantly challenge the basic tenets of the era. An example of this is that the West challenged the Soviet School's collectivism with individual brilliance. I am not sure whether I still agree with this.
By the way, I do agree completely with John Watson's own thesis about how much chess style has changed since the Hypermoderns.
Since this is getting long, I'll stop here, and see if anyone wants me to explain myself (for example why I consider Kasparov a "neo-Romantic" or what I mean by "Neo-classical", or to give some examples of how chess is an integral part of our culture).