Experience the American Generations: Which Generation Are You?

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Generations as we know them today are a relatively recent social construct. In fact, although the names of generations and their associations are widely known and repeated throughout society and especially in the media, there is no official organization that determines what a generation should be called or what years it encompasses. The process tends to be more of a disorderly journey toward social consensus. On top of that, different countries have different collective experiences and delineate and define their generations differently. In short, it’s far from an exact science.

Despite all that, does the “OK boomer” meme still make you feel just a little bit indignant? Are you entirely over headlines that declare yet another thing that “millennials have ruined”? It’s just human nature. Humans are social creatures, and we like to categorize things, especially ourselves. While we can never fully capture with data what individuals’ lives were or are like, sometimes it can be fun to take a broad look at the events, trends, and demographics that have shaped our lives in particular ways. Knowing the first Moon landing happened is one thing; having watched it on TV is a different experience entirely. Getting your first iPhone at 16 is very different from getting it at 61.

Here Britannica explores the major American generations and the times they’ve lived through. Click on any device to get started.

Generations of the past

The Lost Generation is generally considered to be the first named generation of Americans. The term was originally used to describe a particular zeitgeist in writing; it later became a more encompassing term to discuss the cohort of people born at the turn of the 20th century. The generation that came afterward, the Greatest Generation, was named much later.

Generations of the future

Generation Alpha is the working name for the newest generation of Americans, still being born today. We can only speculate about what their lives will be like.

Microgenerations

Some people maintain that being born on the cusp of a generation adds a uniqueness to their experience. For this reason, some names have been created to identify these smaller groups:

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  • Generation Jones (1954–65), the youngest of the baby boomers. This term was largely the idea of Jonathan Pontell, an entrepreneur born in 1958, who contends that the experience of those who came of age in the 1970s was stuck between the oft-cited optimism of the boomers and the cynicism of Generation X.
  • Xennials (1977–83), bridging the gap between Generation X and millennials. Although their lives were marked by the rise of the Internet and the various technologies that sprung from it, they experienced these changes later in life, perhaps in college or young adulthood. They also were entering the job market largely before the Great Recession of 2007–09 that shaped much of the millennial experience.
  • Zillennials (1993–98), bridging the gap between millennials and Generation Z. In the era of rapidly changing memes and trends resulting from the proliferation of the Internet, technology, and social networking, zillennials find they relate to both millennial and Gen Z interests but not to as great a degree as either generation. They remember a time before high-speed Internet and smartphones, but some of them just barely do.
Alison Eldridge