renard_ruse
Break up Amazon
- Joined
- Aug 30, 2007
- Posts
- 16,094
Generation X is mostly ignored by the popular culture and media these days, and its overall population numbers are significantly less than the Baby Boomers who preceded them and Generation Y (and Z) which have followed, so its probably a moot point anyway, but I've been thinking about this lately.
I think that there are two Generation X's. Those who were in high school at some point while Ronald Reagan was President and the later ones who were only kids during Reagan's Presidency. The exact definition of what years constitute Gen X is in dispute but if we take the more traditional 20 year definition of a generation, and assume the Boomers were born from 1944 to 1964, and Generation X from 1964 to 1984, I would say Gen X cohort A consists of those who were born from 1964 to ~ 1975 and cohort B from ~ 75 to 84.
Although I do accept the existence of a broad Generation X that can be historically and culturally distinguished from Boomers and Generation Y, the internal differences between the two Gen X subgroups is something that generational historians often neglect. While many things unite both cohorts, and this was even more so when they were in their younger days, other differences serve to split them in various ways.
I think that there are two Generation X's. Those who were in high school at some point while Ronald Reagan was President and the later ones who were only kids during Reagan's Presidency. The exact definition of what years constitute Gen X is in dispute but if we take the more traditional 20 year definition of a generation, and assume the Boomers were born from 1944 to 1964, and Generation X from 1964 to 1984, I would say Gen X cohort A consists of those who were born from 1964 to ~ 1975 and cohort B from ~ 75 to 84.
Although I do accept the existence of a broad Generation X that can be historically and culturally distinguished from Boomers and Generation Y, the internal differences between the two Gen X subgroups is something that generational historians often neglect. While many things unite both cohorts, and this was even more so when they were in their younger days, other differences serve to split them in various ways.