维基:
The generational gap is and was a term popularized in Western countries during the 1960s referring to differences between people of a younger generation and their elders, especially between a child and their parent's generation.
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Although some generational differences have existed throughout history, becau of more rapid cultural change during the modern era differences between the two generations incread in comparison to previous times, particularly with respect to such matters as musical tastes, fashion, culture and politics. This may have been magnified by the unprecedented size of the young generation during the 1960s, which gave it unprecedented power and willingness to rebel against societal norms.
This can be en in songs such as the 1965 hit "My Generation" by The Who and “The Times They Are a-Changin'" by Bob Dylan.
Specific generation gaps
The 1950s, 1960s and 1970s: Baby Boomers vs. the Older Generation
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As the 1940s ended and the 1950s emerged, marked differences between teenagers and parents began to emerge. From a transformation of the dating system (going steady and early marriage became the norm, as oppod to the "rating and dating" trend that was fashionable before the war), to new medium of television gaining widespread popularity and often portraying teenagers as juvenile delinquents. 'JDs' followed the standard black, The War in Southeast Asia, and the ri of counter-culture hippies during the mid and late 1960s with diverging opinions about the draft and military involvement in Vietnam as well as the u of drugs were significant topics of the generation gap of this era. The cover of Mad Magazine No. 129 by artist Norman Mingo, dated September 1969, showed a split Alfred E. Neuman, the "old" Alfred on the left wearing a "My Country: Right or Wrong" lapel button, and the "young" long-haired Alfred on the right with a "Make Love Not War" button, and the cover statement "MAD Widens the Generation Gap.[1]
The TV ries All in the Family focus on the generation, as a conrvative-minded mid清洗银饰
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dle-aged man repeatedly quarrels with his independent-minded wife and staunchly liberal daughter and son-in-law.
Generation X: The 1980s中国古代民间故事
The 1970s and 1980s are characterized as being an era rampant with child neglect, as shown by such phenomenon as latchkey kids. This period lies between the family-oriented 1950s and 1960s and the "Baby on Board" parenting–focud era of the late 1980s to the prent.
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绳技The 1990s and 2000s: Boomers vs. Generation X and Y
In the 1990s and 2000s, cultural differences concerning what should be the xual norm, as well as new technology, political differences, workplace behavior, age of connt, age of responsibility, the education system, and many other political, cultural, and generational issues, has produced a generation gap between Generation X and Y and their Baby Boomer parents. However, many Baby Boomers grew up during the late 1960
s, and can relate to their young offspring better than their parents related to them and are more willing to tackle subjects such as drugs and x with their children. Nevertheless, the portrayal of teenagers in popular reality television channels, like MTV, has caud concern for parents and a n of alienation amongst teens and young adults of today.
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The Generation Gap
“One of Columbus’ sailors would have been a valuable able aman aboard Farragut’s ships. Even a sailor from the ship that took Saint Paul to Malta would have been quite reasonably at home as a forecastle hand on one of Joph Conrad’s barks. A Roman cattleman from the Dacian frontier would have made quite a competent vaquero to drive longhorn steers from the plains of Texas to the terminus of the railroad, although he would have been struck with astonishment with what he found when he got there. A Babylonian administrator of a temple estate would have needed no training either in bookkeeping or in the handling of slaves to run an early Southern plantation.”--Norbert Wi
ener, The human u of human beings: Cybernetics and Society
A few nights ago I attended an in-person meeting of a comic-book trade organization, Friends of Lulu. The hottest topic of debate was, “how should we hold meetings in the future?” Friends of Lulu could not have been created without the Internet. We’ve managed to find only a few hundred members, scattered throughout the United States and Canada. Almost all of our real meetings are held on-line. This meeting could only be held in person becau it’s in conjunction with the largest comic book convention and trade show in the United States. Even then, only a small fraction of our membership showed up.
The problem is that some of our members are left out of the on-line discussions, and they don’t like it and they don’t understand it. The on-line members would end up being left out of “traditional” meetings. Our one conference call cost us hundreds of dollars and that was just for the officers. An organization as small as Friends of Lulu can’t readily afford that on a regular basis.
The breakdown was clearly on age lines. The older members suggested conference calls and postal mail. Some of the less reactionary suggested FAX, which would incur heavy long distance charges, but even that didn’t go over well. The members couldn’t understand that Friends of Lulu only exists becau the Internet allows disparate individuals to come together, and that the members will not want to give up the immediacy of the Internet for postal mail or midnight FAX.