Quote:
Originally Posted by jocampo
I can't classify myself on any of those. IT guy and love all kind of gadgets. I could be an X, but as per that table, I fall under Millenial gen? hahaha...
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Gen X is 1965-1983. Why? Because the Baby Boom was from 1946-1964. See below.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Andrew H.
Yeah, those definitions always change. In Douglas Coupland's "Generation X," (1991) which was the book that invented the term, he described Generation X as being those people born in the late '50s or early '60s and who basically lived in the shadow of the baby boomers, but had nothing to do with the baby boomers, even though, technically, they were probably considered baby boomers.
But - sort of consistent with his point, actually - the media took the Gen X label away from these folks and applied it to the first post-baby boomer generation.
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And this survey managed to shrink generations down to 11 years. I call BS.
Quote:
Originally Posted by JeremyR
Sorry, this is a late reply, but I don't see how a 1991 book could invent a term that already existed well before 1991.
Billy Idol's original band (before he went solo) was called Generation X...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Generation_X_%28band%29
And he picked the name from another book (from 1965)...which apparently applied the term to the Mod fad of the 60s. But I think Mr. Idol pretty much gave the term the modern meaning
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"Generation X" was a popular term to apply to a group of people of approximately the same age which collectively felt alienated, disenfranchised, or tried to set themselves apart from a previous generation. It's important to consider that "generation" can refer either to chronological or social groupings. Gen X as chronologically defined today means the child of a Baby Boomer. Baby Boomers in turn are identified with the boom in births which occurred immediately following WWII. Since the Baby Boom is historically considered to have been roughly 18 years (the "age of majority"), or from 1946-1964, logically the following generation would be the (roughly) 18-year period after that or 1965-1983. If one considers the trends, beliefs, and behaviors that members of each of these generations exhibit, the years make a lot more sense e.g. an "older Boomer" (as the survey so tactlessly calls it) would have been born in time to serve in Vietnam and a Boomer born later would still be old enough to remember the Beatles being together. As each generation has progressed since then, the numbers get muddy since Boomers kept having children later in life while at the same time, their own children were having children; for instance I'm 39 but I have a brother who's 19. Guess which generation my parents belong to?
Sources:
Carlson, E. (2008, June 30).
The Lucky Few: Between the Greatest Generation and the Baby Boom. Springer.
ISBN 978-1-4020-8540-6. Retrieved February 8, 2011 from
http://books.google.com/?id=zUJgaHde...page&q&f=false.
Shin, A. (2008, February 29). "Non-Toxic Tots".
The Washington Post. Retrieved February 8, 2011 from
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...903658_pf.html.
Strauss, W. & Howe, N. (1992, reprint)
Generations: The History of America's Future, 1584 to 2069. Perennial.
ISBN 0-688-11912-3