Indian millennials : who are they really? / A.M. Gautam
Material type:
- 9788119635894
- 306.3613 GAU-A
Item type | Current library | Collection | Shelving location | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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BITS Pilani Hyderabad | 300 | General Stack (For lending) | 306.3613 GAU-A (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | INR 699.00 | Available | 49422 |
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306.36 ZUC-R Pick three : | 306.360954 BHO-S Industry, labour, and society / | 306.360954 NEW-A Chicken soup for the : Indian entrepreneur's soul / | 306.3613 GAU-A Indian millennials : who are they really? / | 306.3615 CHA-T Why do so many incompetent men become leaders ? : | 306.3808 LAM-S Aging and the Indian diaspora : cosmopolitan families in India and abroad / | 306.4 CYR-S Raising a digital generation : what a parent, teacher or anyone who cares about the future of kids needs to know / |
There are 440 million Millennials (born between 1980 and 1996) in India today. They constitute 34 per cent of the country’s population and 46 per cent of the workforce. They are the chief wage earners in most households. They are the first generation to grow up in a non-socialist economy. Consumerism permeates every single aspect of their lives. The food they eat, the workout regimes they follow, the language they speak, and their professed ideological and political beliefs are all dictated by capitalism. Great bodies and English-speaking skills are crucial social aspirations to boost their self-worth and make them stand out in the fledgling world of Indian dating. They are the first generation tasked with navigating a post-truth world where all assertions are double-faced, elastic, and subject to wilful misinterpretation. All these facets of the Millennial generation are speculated about but poorly understood.
So, who are Indian Millennials? What are the attitudes and lifestyle choices that define their views on politics, gender and sexuality, work and income, caste and class, love, marriage and family, mental health and well-being, and much, much more? In this eye-opening book, A. M. Gautam (a Millennial himself ) travels across the country, meeting Millennials in small towns and big cities, to provide a fascinating account of one of the most distinctive generations of our time. Of the many insights he offers in the book, the chapter ‘The Bodies of Millennial Men’ unearths truths about the uneasy relationship male Millennials have with their bodies; in ‘Millennials vs the Apocalypse’ we see the anxieties and general sense of doom Millennials are prone to; in ‘Eat Your Fear’, he talks about the confusion and fear Millennials have about food—and their love affair with the avocado; in ‘Millennials in the Moonlight’ we meet Daksh, a software development engineer, who worked as many as four jobs to make good and how this schedule finally did him in; in ‘Spiritual, Not Religious’, we sense the growing disillusionment of Millennials with traditional religions and how they are seeking fulfilment in non-traditional spiritual organizations; ‘Our Monochromatic Tongue’ demonstrates the tendency of Millennials to resort to hyperbole and how this is draining language of its power—any offbeat thing they experience is ‘surreal’, each bowl of ramen is ‘AMAZING!’, each new step in life is ‘a life-transforming experience’, and they must always ‘deep dive’ into ideas.
Through these and other stories, the author paints a vivid picture of a generation that has often been misunderstood as effete, sanctimonious, confused, ineffectual, narcissistic, and sybaritic. He argues that from climate change to wage equity, body-image issues, sexual liberty, and much else, Indian Millennials have made positive and much-needed contributions to Indian society, activism, politics, work, and culture. Millennials really want to make India and the world a better place, perhaps more than any previous generation, and they are trying to make this come about in their own inimitable way. This book shows us how.
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