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Graeme Codrington Denomination: Baptist (All) Email: Send 'Thank-you' |
Synopsis: A comparison of the generations |
"Boomer", "generation x", "buster", "millenial", "silent", "lost"??? What are all these titles, and to whom do they refer? Sociologists and the media have used these and other titles to refer to different generations of people alive at the moment. People have been broken down, roughly, into general generations, characterised by similar qualities and attitudes. These normally span a 20 year period. Although it is impossible to generalise accurately and describe each individual in a group of people, it is uncanny how different generational attitudes can be discerned, and characterisations can be made.
The importance of such classifications is that we can target our message (whatever that may be) at a specific target group, identifiable by distinct and similar attitudes.
This page tries to define how the different generations feel, react and what they believe and perceive regarding a wide variety of issues.
If you don't know which generation you fit into, why not take this (light-hearted) test and find out? (PS - the test is designed to be fun, but it does get to the heart of the differences between the generations).
Other pages of similar type information:
If you feel I have missed the mark on one or more of these sections, I would love to hear from you. I am an X'er, and have not lived through the previous generations - my findings are based on extensive research, but I know there is room for improvement. Please contact me at: youth.sa@pix.co.za
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| Youth | Dependence | 0-21 | ||
| Rising Adulthood | Activity | 22-42 | ||
| Midlife | ? | 43-64 | ||
| Elderhood | ? | 65-86 | ||
| Seniors | ? | 87+ |
Howe and Strauss, in their books on the generations of America, (e.g. The Fourth Turning) explain that each generation experiences a CRISIS and an AWAKENING. These usually occur at 40 year intervals, so that if the crisis is experienced in youth, the awakening will be experienced in midlife. The crises of the 20th century are: The two World Wars and the Great Depression (which is the one they use as the early crisis of this century). The awakening was the intellectual and economic boost of the early sixties.
The GI generation was born between 1900 and 1924. 1900 is an obvious
cut-off for this generation, as it is the start of the new century. As we move
towards the end of this century, we can begin to get a feeling of the sense of
something new and different that predominated at the end of the last century.
However, our feelings about the 21st century are not as up-beat as the feelings
at the end of the 19th century were. The 20th began with high expectations for
prosperity and idyllic living, which was shattered by the CRISIS event which
occurred in their YOUTH, namely World War I.
1924
is the cut-off date for this generation. This was at the height of the
"roaring twenties" economic boom in America. "Following a postwar
depression in 1920-21, the economy bounced back with a vengeance, growing a
torrid 30% in the next two years. And money succeeded in holding its purchasing
power as inflation averaged a less than 1% in the decade. The boom filled
federal coffers. The 1920s was the last decade in this century when the federal
budget ran a surplus every year. The national debt shrank from $24 billion to
$16 billion. Taxes were reduced" (from TIME,
JULY 28, 1997 VOL. 150 NO. 4.
Also in 1924: Russia: Lenin died; UK: BBC
Radio began public broadcasts; South Africa: Hertzog's Nationalist Party was
elected to government.
The Silent generation begins on 1925 and runs through to 1942. This generation experienced the worldwide crisis of the Great Depression, which began on "Black Tuesday" (strating on Friday 24 October), the crash happened on 29 October 1929 in NY, and (among other reasons) precipitated a world-wide Depression that continued well into the 1930's, and was followed by the crippling World War in 1939.
The Boomer generation begins in 1943 and runs through to 1960. I am
not entirely sure why the literature on this issue puts the date in the middle
of the Second World War, rather than at the end. The key events in 1942/3 were:
The bombing of Sydney, Australia by the Japanese, and the increased involvement
of America in the War (in Europe), the first nuclear power station unveiled and
the retaking of North Africa by Allied Troops. Whether it was 1942 or 1945
really doesn't make too much difference, however. It must be noted that Boomers
will not remember the war.
After the War, "ex-soldiers got married, and
their offspring, the baby-boom generation, swelled the population 18.4%, to 178
million. Everybody went shopping: consumer spending--adjusted for
inflation--surged 38% in the decade. As families grew, demand for hospitals,
schools and homes took off. All this activity lifted the average annual growth
in real gross national product by 4.8% from 1947 to 1953, slowing to 2.5% for
the rest of the decade. Globally, the U.S. economy ruled" (from TIME,
JULY 28, 1997 VOL. 150 NO. 4.
During the Boomers' developing years of Youth and Rising Adulthood, they
lived through an economic boom and tremendous growth. But the euphoria this
produced was undermined by a series of events, including: the Cold War, Civil
rights abuses and activists (until the final signing of the Civil Righs Act in
1964 - and then began the long struggle to integrae, that continues even today
in the US, and elsewhere), the Great Train Robbery (1963), JFK assassinated
(1963), the Profumo Scandal (1964), Mandela sentenced for treason (1964),
Vietnam (1965-1973), Moon landing (1969), Watergate scandal (1973), Apollo 13
disaster (1970), Mars landing (1976), the increase in international terrorism,
shootings of major world leaders - e.g. Pope (1981), Reagan (1981), the Irn
hostage situation (1981), Biko killed in jail (1977), Soweto riots (1976),
Margaret Thatcher elected PM (1979), Falklands war (1982), etc.
This is
mainly a long list of tragic occurrences, involving technogolical feats of
wonder, followed by breakdowns of mammoth scale; it involves great politicians
being killed or disgraced, and civil rights problems and human rights abuses and
wars. This produced a sense of failure and despair on the system. Many of
these events were also defining during the 13th generation's Youth.
The Thirteenth generation begins in 1961 and runs through to 1983. The
literature is divided as to when the 13th Generation begins - anywhere from 1960
to 1968. I have chosen the earlier date since most authors who argue for the
later one, also argue that 1960 -1968 should be treated separately (the
so-called Tweeners). A number of important events happened in 1960/1: The
first women PM in the world (Ceylon), a massive anti-Soviet campaign at the UN,
the election of JFK (the first president to born in this century), the Apartheid
riots in Sharpeville (South Africa), the closing of the border between East and
West Berlin and the rise of Castro in Cuba, the Bay of Pigs debacle, and riots
in the newly formed Republic of South Africa. Russia and America both put men
into space in 1961 and 62.
Additionally, "the strain [on America] of
being both an economic and a military superpower started to show. The federal
deficit in 1959 jumped to 2.6% of gross domestic product, the largest since
1946. By the 1960s, ambitious social programs and the widening war in Vietnam
led to higher taxes, while economies in Europe and Asia began to make inroads
against the U.S" (from TIME,
JULY 28, 1997 VOL. 150 NO. 4.
On 16 and 19 October 1987, share prices in
NY and London went crashing. 19 October is called "Black Monday". This
sparked off a world-wide recession that was short and sharp. In the early 1990's
the economies bagan to recover, until in 1995, all-time record highs were set.
The Millenial generation begins in 1984 and runs through to 2000. The date of 1984 is set such that these young people will graduate from High School in the next century.
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In South Africa: Angola, internal freedom struggle These were charismatic, inspiring, idealist figureheads -
"men for the times". People wanted inspiration and
motivation. Martin Luther King, Mandela, Biko, Malcolm X (all were civil
rights activists).
Inspiring leaders, taking their nations to a glorious future.
However, the attitude to the activists as well as some major
blunders (Bay of Pigs, Watergate) removed the awe and trust of
people. Many of these leaders were assassinated by discontent and
disillusioned people. Walensa (Poland) (a unionist and political activist
Most of these leaders brought about sweeping reforms. They are
not held in high regard, since previous generations have their
politic heritage removed, and people don't like
change. These leaders are "mostly harmless". Not seen to
carry much power, and largely ignored. Not inspirational (Mandela
may be the exception, although he inspires by what he has been
through, rather than what he is doing politically). These
politicians are elected BECAUSE they are perceived to be less
threatening. Computers were centralised in operation - terminals attached
to a central hub Computers became decentralised, stand alone Decentralised computers now joined together in International
network - same power as centralisation, but retaining flexibility of
decentralisation Sarte Karl Popper My Gen-x perception is that there was very little difference
between different groups of people with respect to dress. The
different clothes represented merely social status and money, rather
than differences in atitude or association. The different groups were very distinctive, and identified
clearly by the way they dressed. Clothes indicated an attitude on
other issues. Very individual. Many different small groups identified by
cltohing, but clothes are no longer a distinctive identifier.
Fashion is not used to make a statement. Seems to be a return to a common "look", rather than
the individuality of the X'ers. e.g. 1982 - first outside, full colour video screen at Dodgers
stadium Copyright 2008, YouthPastor.com. All Rights Reserved
War
World War II, Korea
Vietnam
Vietnam
In Britain: Falklands
Yugoslavia-Czechoslovakia-Bosnia
Many internal, civil wars
around the world (especially in Africa)
International Political
SituationWorld War II - politics on a global scale, with single,
inetrnational focus
Cold War - East vs. West
Bay of Pigs (US failed invasion of
Cuba)
International terrorism at a height, and rise of
"terrorist states" (e.g. Libya)
Nuclear threatBerlin war comes down, communism dies.
Economic
pressure used by international community to enforce their will (e.g.
South Africa, Cuba)Rise of China and the East - Hong Kong handback.
The rapidly
falling power of the UN (UN peacekeeping forces have disappointing
results).
Politicians and Political Activists active at height of the
generation (i.e. during Rising Adulthood)
Churchill, Roosevelt, Stalin, Hitler, Jan Smuts (RSA)
John F Kennedy, Mao Tse Tung, Brezhnev, Nixon, Malan (RSA)
Thatcher, Reagan, Bush, Gorbachev, Mitterand, de Klerk
(RSA)
Major, Clinton, Blair, Mandela
Types of government
Inspiring and bold, yet controlling and authoritarian - needed
during the crisis, so that order can be restored.
Inspirational, dynamic, revolutionary (in the sense of bringing
change)
Libertarian, accountable, "transparent", consultative
Practical and pragmatic
Leadership styles that are best responded to
Process driven, pluralistic.
Righteous, austere.Exude confidence. Visionary.
Consultative. Pragmatic and cautious.
Grand, expansive.
Discrimination
Suffrage
Organised movement against discriminations, e.g. Feminism,
racial discrimination-Martin Luther King, Mandela, Biko
Women seen more as equals - Thatcher;
Gay rights
become an issue; continued racial problems and immigrant
problem;
Rise of political correctness (PC)A possible backlash against women, other races (e.g. immigration
laws tightened), OR equality will be enforced
Computers
None
Mainframes
1976 - Personal Computers (PC)
Multimedia, Networking and Internet
Defining Philosophical Movements and philosophers
Philosophy is often ahead of its time, and is thus probably
not a good guide for a generation's thinking. Existentialism and Humanism
Logical Positivism, decomstrcutionism
Theoretical Atsrophysics (not really a philosophy, but it is
greatly affecting philology and theonomy)
??
Knowledge Base
Tremendous shifts in knowledge, especially from Newtonian
physics - atomic theory, relativity, Heisenberg, medical advances
Space race - focus on the universe; science becomes more
specialised, with less general theorists
Scientific fields are incredibly specialised and only for a few
experts - research done in teams, not as individuals - too much for
one person to try and grasp and assimilate
There will be more emphasis on minutiae - less opportunity to be
original
School Learning
Types of subjects
Reflection of older
generation, who
are the educatorsMore emphasis on concrete (in the physical sciences) and on fine
arts
Conceptual knowledge. Challenge everything and try to change
things to be the way they "should" be.
Secondary education seen as preparation for tertiary, rather
than an end in itself (i.e. not practically based).
Shift towards more technical and practical education. Life
skills, socialisation, "outcome based education",
community training, civic mindedness. Emphasize science and
engineering.
Global Village
Telephone
Satellite, TV
Fax, Cell phones, Computer Networks
Internet
Music
Swing, Big band
Rock 'n' Roll
Disco, Pop, Heavy Metal, MTV, Unplugged
House, Rave, Grunge, MTV, Rap
Movies -cult movies and genres (are there defining movie
genres?)
Casablanca
epicsWar movies, westerns, spy movies (James Bond)
Sci-fi, Spielberg and Tarrantino
Horror, remakes
Fashion and fads
Formal - young people dress like adults, no real distinction
between work and play clothes
More sexual dressing. Bell bottoms, stovepipes, leather,
miniskirts, platforms, hippies, etc.
Asexual.
Androgenous, bulky.
Type of entertainment
Clubs
Drugs, coffee shops
On-the-edge (e.g. bungi), bars
Friendship, relaxed and informal settings (out of which has
grown the Rave scene).
Sport
Amateur
Professionalism
Major money in advertising and appearance fees
Sports people
become amongst top earnersMore sports will be making more money - and younger competitors
will be involved
Radio
1916 - first radio station; 1922 - first commercial on radio was
flighted; 1924 - first BBC broadcast
1948 - transistors invented
- cheaper, lighter radios?
?
Radio losing out to other media
Television
Experimental. 1927 - first TV broadcast in UK; 1928 - first sale
to public (USA)
TV grows in status
1960 - 1st live sports game (football);
first presidential debate in USA; 1957 - Sputnik was first
satellite, used for radio and TV transmissions.Satellite and cable TV - TV in every home
TV as primary new
source for world news (e.g. CNN, Sky, etc.)MTV - TV for young people, by young people - truly
international
"Cult" (popular) TV shows
?
Star Trek (first series), games shows, ?
Star Trek: Next Generation, Beverly Hills 91210, Roseanne, Talk
shows
X-files, Simpsons, Beavis & Butthead, MTV, CNN
Mass media
Newsreels (news and entertainment combined)
TV media
Media Blitz - CNN, Tabloids, advertising, etc.
Internet
Family Life (what the parents do)
Many family businesses - families stay together for longer
Busy father - absent and always working
Both parents working; single parent (working) families;
disrupted.
??
Typical TV families
n/a
Brady bunch
Roseanne
?
Youth-Parent Attachment
Obedient to both
Strongest to mother
Independent of both
Strongest to father
View of Marriage
High
An option
Low and negative view
??
Age of marriage (stats to come)
Young
Older
Oldest
Getting younger again
Attitude to elders
? - do what are told without question
Rebellion
Not interested
Obedient, and wanting to interact
View of retirement
"The Golden Years"
"A chance to write that novel..."
"The agonising slide into abject poverty"
"A daily struggle to survive in a polluted world (unless we
fix it first"
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