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i was born in 83

2007-10-15 11:23:55 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous in Arts & Humanities Genealogy

4 answers

generation Y
generation X is before us

2007-10-15 11:26:42 · answer #1 · answered by krasnoglaz 3 · 1 0

Parts of article on http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Generation_X:

Generation X is a term used to describe generations in many countries around the world. The exact demographic boundaries of Generation X are not well defined, depending on who is using the term, where and when. The term is used in demography, the social sciences, and marketing, though it is most often used in popular culture. The generation's influence over pop culture began in the 1980s and may have peaked in the 1990s.

The term was first used in a 1964 study of British youth by Jane Deverson. Deverson was asked by the editor of the magazine "Woman's Own" to conduct a series of interviews with teenagers of the time. The study revealed a generation of teenagers who "sleep together before they are married, don't believe in God, dislike the Queen, and don't respect parents," which was deemed unsuitable for the magazine because it was a new phenomenon. Deverson, in an attempt to save her research, worked with Hollywood correspondent Charles Hamblett to create a book about the study. Hamblett decided to name it Generation X.

In the book Generations, William Strauss and Neil Howe called this generation the "13th Generation" because it's the 13th to know the flag of the United States (counting back to the peers of Benjamin Franklin). Strauss and Howe defined the birth years of the 13th Generation as 1961 to 1981 based on examining peaks and troughs in cultural trends rather than simply looking at birth rates. Howe and Strauss speak of six influences that they believe have shaped Generation 13. These influences are as follows:

Increase in divorce
Increase in mothers in the work place
The Zero population growth movement
"Devil-child films"


The perception of Generation X during the early 1990s was summarized in a featured article in Time Magazine:

“ . . .They possess only a hazy sense of their own identity but a monumental preoccupation with all the problems the preceding generation will leave for them to fix . . .This is the twentysomething generation, those 48 million young Americans ages 18 through 29 who fall between the famous baby boomers and the boomlet of children the baby boomers are producing. Since today's young adults were born during a period when the U.S. birthrate decreased to half the level of its postwar peak, in the wake of the great baby boom, they are sometimes called the baby busters. By whatever name, so far they are an unsung generation, hardly recognized as a social force or even noticed much at all...By and large, the 18-to-29 group scornfully rejects the habits and values of the baby boomers, viewing that group as self-centered, fickle and impractical. While the baby boomers had a placid childhood in the 1950s, which helped inspire them to start their revolution, today's twentysomething generation grew up in a time of drugs, divorce and economic strain. . .They feel paralyzed by the social problems they see as their inheritance: racial strife, homelessness, AIDS, fractured families and federal deficits.



(So, being born in 1983, you would be considered part of Generation X).

2007-10-15 17:04:07 · answer #2 · answered by jan51601 7 · 0 1

The next group after X.

2007-10-15 11:31:20 · answer #3 · answered by Indigo 7 · 1 0

people from pakistan don't count.

2007-10-15 22:14:23 · answer #4 · answered by Eleanor Roosevelt 4 · 1 1

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