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Kids in America

A Gen X Reckoning

ebook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available
Generation X was born between the legions of Baby Boomers and Millennials, and was all but written off as cynical, sarcastic slackers. Yet, Gen X's impact on culture and society is undeniable. In her revealing and provocative essay collection, KIDS IN AMERICA: ESSAYS ON GEN X, Liz Prato reveals a generation deeply affected by terrorism, racial inequality, rape culture, and mental illness in an era when none of these issues were openly discussed. Examined through the lens of her high school and family, Prato reveals a small, forgotten cohort shaped as much by Sixteen Candles and Beverly Hills, 90210, as it was by the Rodney King riots and the threat of nuclear annihilation. Prato is unflinching in asking hard questions of her peers about what behavior was then acceptable or overlooked, and how we reconcile those sins today. KIDS IN AMERICA illuminates a generation that is often cited, but rarely examined beyond the gloss of nostalgia.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      February 28, 2022
      Editor Prato (Volcanoes, Palm Trees, and Privilege) mixes memoir and cultural criticism in this clever look at the “generation who was mesmerized by the gloss of MTV for the first time.” Gen Xers were the first to make less money than their parents and “the last generation to live without fear of being gunned down in school,” Prato writes. In “Magnum Force,” she details the stranglehold Magnum, P.I. had on the culture and her family; “A Letter to Frederic Lyman and the Plethora of Other Private School Teachers Who Sexually Abused Their Students” powerfully addresses a man who committed sexual assaults across numerous schools in the 1970s and ’80s; and the title essay sees her candidly write that, at youth summer camp, “we wore replicas of sacred regalia for Halloween,” noting, “there was meaning behind what we did: the belief that we had a right to plunder the land and culture and customs of those who came before us.” Prato offers shrewd analyses, but there are some big disparities between essays, with those on pop culture seeming trite in the face of the larger social ills discussed elsewhere. Still, it’s a mostly rewarding look at what shaped Prato’s life and generation.

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  • English

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