07-18-2016, 09:19 AM
Analysis of the Generations Isn’t an Exact Science
http://www.wsj.com/articles/analysis-of-...1468575000
It's a WSJ article, avoid the paywall by cutting and pasting the name of the headline into google.
http://www.wsj.com/articles/analysis-of-...1468575000
Quote: ENLARGE
By
Jo Craven McGinty
July 15, 2016 5:30 a.m. ET
28 COMMENTS
Baby boomers. Generation X. Millennials.
These are the familiar sobriquets of recent generations, but what exactly defines the cohorts, and what, if anything, do their labels reveal?
A generation, in this sense, refers to people associated with a distinct era of history based on their years of birth. But the cutoffs are fuzzy, and critics charge that the descriptions are little more than insulting stereotypes: Boomers, we’re told, are ambitious workaholics. Gen Xers are disenfranchised cynics. Millennials are self-entitled narcissists.
Name-calling aside, the groupings are attractive to academics and others who want to measure social and cultural change.
http://www.wsj.com/articles/analysis-of-...1468575000
It's a WSJ article, avoid the paywall by cutting and pasting the name of the headline into google.