Reseña del editor:
Who really are the "twentysomething" Americans? In this anthology of lively and intelligent, original personal essays, sixteen diverse and talented writers aged 24 to 32 cut through the stereotypes and reveal through their own stories the true face of their generation. Humorous, ironic, satiric, or angry, the eight men and eight women contributors grapple with how coming of age in the uncertain America of the 1970s, '80s, and '90s has affected their lives and world views. Some have written widely; others publish here their first piece of extended prose. Their variety of opinions and personalities defies the image of America's younger generation as materialistic, self-pitying, and apathetic. Brought together in this collection by a commitment to thoughtfulness, these writers provide both their fellow "twentysomethings" and their elders a deeper understanding of what forces are shaping America's future. Many of the writers explore the fallout of their parents' cultural revolt of the 1960s and 1970s. The growth in divorce and family instability, writes Elizabeth Wurtzel, has produced an epidemic of depression in her generation and a need among friends to cling together in extended family groups well into adulthood. Another subject is how the loss of heroes for this generation has contributed to its cynicism. Many of the writers tell what it is like coming of age amid more open divisions of race, ethnicity, and sexual orientation than faced by any previous generation. New York hip-hop poet Paul Beatty wittily navigates the post-civil rights era's "acceptable shades of blackness, " as he learned it growing up in Los Angeles and then moving east. Another essayist comments on the irony of being a successful black conservative. Lalo Lopez, co-founder of the East L.A. comedy troupe Chicano Secret Service, declares the boisterous arrival of "Generation Mex, " while editor Eric Liu affirms a different view that second-generation immigrants still can have faith in American i
Reseña del editor:
America's much-discussed but little-understood "twenty-somethings" reveal their true face in this anthology of 16 personal essays by American writers aged 24 to 32. Humourous, ironic, satirical or angry, the contributors, including Naomi Wolf and poets Stephen Beachy and Paul Beatty, grapple with how the uncertain cultural, political and sexual times in which they came of age have affected their lives and views of the world. In what amounts to a mini-debate, four of the contributors present their widely differing views on the future of feminism. Other essayists chart the confusions caused by shifting sexual mores. Many of the writers explore the fallout of their parents' cultural revolt of the 1960s and 1970s. Other topics covered include: the generation's loss of heroes; the rage of being young and HIV-positive; the post-civil rights era's "acceptable shades of blackness"; and the arrival of the new "Generation Mex".
„Über diesen Titel“ kann sich auf eine andere Ausgabe dieses Titels beziehen.