- Lost Generation
The 'Lost Generation' is a phrase made popular by American author
Ernest Hemingway in his first published novel "The Sun Also Rises ". [cite book|author=Hemingway Ernest |title=The sun also rises |page=13] Often it is used to refer to a group of American literary notables who lived inParis and other parts ofEurope , some after military service in the First World War. Figures identified with the "Lost Generation" include authors and poets Hemingway,F. Scott Fitzgerald ,Ezra Pound ,Sherwood Anderson ,Waldo Peirce , andJohn Dos Passos .Origin of the term
The coining of the phrase is sometimes attributed to
Gertrude Stein [As described by Hemingway in the chapter "Une Generation Perdue," of "A Moveable Feast ", the term was coined by the owner of the Paris garage where Gertrude Stein took herModel T Ford , and was picked up and translated by her.] and was then popularized byErnest Hemingway in the epigraph to his novel "The Sun Also Rises " and his memoir "A Moveable Feast ". In the latter, he explained, "I tried to balance Miss Stein's quotation from the garage owner with one fromEcclesiastes ." (A few lines after, recalling the risks and losses of the war, he adds, "I thought of Miss Stein and Sherwood Anderson and egotism and mental laziness versus discipline and I thought who is calling who a lost generation?")It also refers to the time period from the end of World War I to the beginning of the
Great Depression . More generally, the term is used for thegeneration of young people coming of age in theUnited States during and shortly after World War I. For this reason, the generation is sometimes known as the World War I Generation. InEurope , they are most often known as the Generation of 1914, for the year World War I began. InFrance , the country in which manyexpatriates settled, they are sometimes called the "Génération du Feu", the Generation of Fire. Broadly, the term is often used to refer to the younger literary modernists.Popular culture
*The 1988 film "
The Moderns " is set in 1926 Paris during the period of the "Lost Generation".
*"All Quiet on the Western Front " byErich Maria Remarque , covers extensively the theme of the lost generation from the perspective of a German soldier returning from World War I.
*"The Razor's Edge " byW. Somerset Maugham , looks at the time period through the eyes of an American pilot psychologically damaged by World War I.ee also
*
Social issues of the 1920s
*List of generations Notes
External links
* [http://mehallowk.bravehost.com/lostgeneration.html A look at the Lost Generation]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.