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Generation X: Tales for an Accelerated Culture, published in 1991, is the first novel by Douglas Coupland. It is Coupland's most famous novel, partially due to the fact that it spawned the term Generation X.
The original publishing of the novel was presented in a wide-paged dual column style. In one column is the storyline, and in the other were neologisms (along with definitions for each of them) used to describe the lives of Generation X members, as well as small illustrations. Some later editions of the novel were produced with in a more traditional style, but the margin notes were retained as footnotes.
The novel is a social satire about three members of Generation X - Dag, Andy, and Claire - who have moved to Palm Springs, California to get away from an overly commercialized world and rediscover themselves. In the process, they tell each other (and the guests who drop by now and then) stories, some about their lives and some made up to represent aspects of their lives.
Through the main story as well as the stories the characters tell, we see examples of how life is for members of Generation X. Stuck with their only career choices being in the service industry, being forced to live with the commercialism that is all around them, and being unable to afford housing, their generation lives a bleak life that is only getting bleaker. The only hope for the characters is to leave behind the lives they live and find new ones without the trappings of modern society.
The novel became widely popular after its first publication. The assortment of neologisms presented in the book would help in this popularizing. Some of these terms, such as McJob, became commonly used by both the media and the public. More notably, however, was the widespread use of the term "Generation X", which began being used as a name for the generation by the media after the publication of the novel.
Coupland took the X from Paul Fussell's 1983 book Class, where the term "class X" designated a region of America's social heirarchy rather than a generation. As Coupland explained in a 1995 interview, "In his final chapter, Fussell named an 'X' category of people who wanted to hop off the merry-go-round of status, money, and social climbing that so often frames modern existence." This would become a popular view in the media of what the Generation X's attitude was like at the time.