In Cat’s Cradle,
Kurt Vonnegut invented the term “granfalloon” to describe a collection of people
who make more of an utterly factitious commonality than the commonality deserves.
Examples would be Rotary Clubs, Sagittarians, alumni of the same prep school, citizens
of a nation, and members of the same ethnic group. Typically, beyond that one
shared datum, members have little more in common with each other than they have
with random outsiders. Sometimes granfallooning is a harmless and pleasant
excuse for socializing; sometimes it is downright deadly and an excuse for
cruelty. Whether or not they are foolish artifacts, however, these group
identities influence the behaviors of the people in them and the perceptions
others have of them.
Generations arguably are granfalloons, since the members within
each generation vary enormously in politics, lifestyles, preferences, and
circumstances. Yet, people born at roughly the same time in roughly similar
cultures (e.g. Boomers in the US
and UK , but not also in China ) really do
experience a common history and grow up in a common popular culture. Those
experiences are a framework for a sense of identity. Boomers, those born
between 1946 and 1964 (the year the birth rate started a nose dive), formed the
largest generation in history up to that time; they were the first born into
general affluence and were smugly aware of how they differed from their parents.
They still are. Their successors, the Xers, revel in not being Boomers and
still like their Grunge; Smells Like Teen
Spirit is almost sure to be somewhere on their iPods. Generation Y, also
called Millennials and Echo-Boomers, has been in the news lately. The reason:
it is the first generation to outnumber the Boomers and it has come of age.
There is no definitive agreement about where the birth
years of Generation Y begin and end. I’ve seen start-dates as early as 1976 and
end-dates as late as 2004, but most commonly Generation Y is taken to mean the
present crop of youthful adults, 18-35, which means the birth years 1977 to
1994. Commonalities? Tech is an obvious answer. They grew up with (or
encountered early) the internet, cell phones, video games, and social networks.
A majority lived with a single parent at some point prior to leaving high
school. They are more ethnically diverse, they have finished more years of
school, and they leave school carrying more debt in real as well as nominal
terms than members of any previous generation. Illegal drug use is
substantially lower among them than among their parents at comparable ages, though
legal drug use (e.g. Paxil, Xanax, Ritalin) is higher. Older folks often
complain they are slackers, but older folks always say that about younger, so
the reality is unclear. Some suggest that digital interconnectivity has damaged
their education (see The Dumbest
Generation by Mark Bauerlein) since they are less likely to memorize what
is a click away on the Net; yet, since there is, in fact, less need to memorize
what is a click away on the Net, the jury is still out on this one. Oddly, (and
I have no explanation for this) they get their driver’s licenses later, and
that trend continues. In 1998, 65% of eligible drivers age 19 or younger had
licenses; today only 46% do. When I was in college, men were a small majority
of the college population (Vietnam ,
the draft, and the S2 Student Deferment had something to do with that), but
today women earn 60% of Bachelor Degrees, and a majority of Masters and
Doctorates.
So, yes, the stats for Generation Y are different from the
stats of earlier generations. But then, current stats are always different from
older ones. If there is a generation to compare with Y, perhaps it is the one
born 1877 to 1894: Carl Sandburg, Margaret Sanger,
HL Mencken, Dorothy Parker, Mae West, Aldous Huxley, E. E. Cummings, et al.
That cadre felt the 20th century belonged to it in much the same way
Millennials feel the 21st is theirs; they were comfortable with
telephones, automobiles, and electric appliances in ways their horse-and-buggy
parents were not. The Philippine War for the US and the Boer War for the UK were similar to the grim experience of Iraq in the
2000s, and the Panic of 1907 was a financial crisis on the order of the one of
2008.
Let’s hope the similarity ends there. The 20th
century got worse – insanely worse – before it got better.
I asked a couple Y-ers what song represents the Generation musically. They hemmed and hawed but finally agreed on this by Adele as being most “pan-niche,” which is a term I think I understand. (Party Rock Anthem by LMFAO was a contender also.) I’ll take their word for it.
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