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ERIC Number: EJ1310476
Record Type: Journal
Publication Date: 2021
Pages: 7
Abstractor: As Provided
ISBN: N/A
ISSN: EISSN-2155-5834
EISSN: N/A
"Gen Z Will Save Us:" Applauded and Dismissed as a Gen Z Climate Activist (Perspective from the Field)
Hess, Tobias
Journal of Applied Research on Children, v12 n1 Article 5 2021
If one looks up the words "Gen Z will" on Google, the first two results that appear are "Gen Z will save the world" and "Gen Z will change the world." Regardless of the veracity of these claims, the notion that Gen Z has a unique ability to shape global culture and politics runs rampant in mainstream media ecosystems. The idea has taken on unique prescience with activist Greta Thunberg and the global school climate strikes. Even as Thunberg, in speech after speech, claims that she does not want to be praised for giving older generations "hope" and instead wants meaningful policy change, the cultural discourse at large is still addicted to pedalling the idea that Gen Z and youth climate activists will change society for the better. While this may seem like a compliment to Gen Z, this notion is actually deeply destabilizing. The claim that Gen Z activists are inspiring and will save the world works to obscure and avoid the substance of youth climate activists' claims who want policy change now, not in the future once members of Gen Z are leaders. I will track the various ways that media outlets and public figures celebrate Gen Z climate protests and analyze the ways that celebrating the use of Gen Z voices is a means of avoiding the substance of youth activist demands. I will then put these observations in conversation with the words of New York Times writer Charlie Warzel who wrote the following in a June 2020 article titled "Gen Z Will Not Save Us:" "Generation Z is disillusioned by a country and its myriad institutions whose moral arc seems to bend toward corruption and stagnation. It is also, like any generation, not monolithic. And the way that its justified disillusion will play politically, culturally and socially is unknown." Bringing in this incisive analysis from Warzel will center the fact that much of Gen Z activism is an earnest response to a destabilizing culture and political landscape. Warzel also helps us see that any grand narrative surrounding Gen Z political heroism is reductive, unhelpful and ultimately shifts the onus of enacting change onto Gen Z.
Children At Risk. 2900 Weslayan Street Suite 400, Houston, TX 77027. Tel: 713-869-7740; Fax: 713-869-3409; e-mail: jarc@childrenatrisk.org; Web site: http://digitalcommons.library.tmc.edu/childrenatrisk/
Publication Type: Journal Articles; Reports - Evaluative
Education Level: N/A
Audience: N/A
Language: English
Sponsor: N/A
Authoring Institution: N/A
Grant or Contract Numbers: N/A