ASSIGNMENT- I (15 marks )
Q1 Write about the positive side of rebelliousness mentioned in the chapter 'The Generation
Gapहंड्रेड वर्ड्स
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Answer:
Below we have given a long essay on Generation Gap of 500 words is helpful for classes 7, 8, 9 and 10 and Competitive Exam Aspirants. This long essay on the topic is suitable for students of class 7 to class 10, and also for competitive exam aspirants.
Generation gap is an everlasting social phenomenon. Every generation lives at a certain time under certain condition. So, different generations have their own system of values and views. And every side wants to uphold the principles they believe in.
We can find a lot of examples in literature such as ‘Fathers and Sons’ novel by Ivan Turgenev and ‘Woe from Wit’ by Alexander Griboyedov or taking other set of examples of popular movies like ‘Baghban’, ‘Ek Rishta’ etc. This problem has remained unresolved throughout ages.
The gap between the old people and the young is called generation gap. It is the difference in attitude or lack of understanding between younger and older generation. This generation gap has always been there, but these days it has reached an explosive stage. The values and patterns of life have changed to a great extent. Today, everybody likes to live and behave in his own way. This attitude has enlarged the generation gap, which is becoming wider day by day.
It is now disrupting the family life completely. The elders look after the children and make all sorts of sacrifices to bring them up. Parents want children to follow their instructions as they believe it is for the benefit of children and would do them good. On the other hand, children face immense pressure of exams and cut-throat competition, and think that parents know nothing about the demands of this fast paced world. In the end, despite love and affection for each other, both are drained of energy and are unable to comprehend the other. Consequently, there is lack of communication between the two, that with time, develops into a larger rift. George Orwell, a famous novelist quotes
“Each generation imagines itself to be more intelligent than the one
that went before it and wiser than the one that comes after it.”
Elaboration to this quote is that one generation believes the following generation is missing essential values and belief, and is becoming less productive over time. Psychologists believe that most young people experience conflict during their adolescence. They are neither children anymore nor yet adults, but individuals, who are desperately searching for self-identity. As they grow up, they adopt values that differ from those held by their parents and develop an unfavourable attitude towards the adult world.
In earlier times, two or three generations lived in the same lifestyle and environment as the development was very slow. But today, nearest past is very much outdated and the world is more advanced each day. Parents do not even know many of the modern technologies and equipment children use. Conflicts actually arise because young people feel that they have a right to be independent. They look at parents as ‘enemies’ who do not let them live the way they want like by staying out late, wearing fashionable clothes or choosing their own friends. What makes things even worse is that teenagers suffer a sense of incapability and rage as they realise that financially they still depend on their parents.
Unlike West, in India, this problem is yet in the initial stages, but the gap has appeared and it is going to grow bigger day by day. “If you want happiness for a lifetime help the next generation”, says a Chinese proverb. So, it is not only the responsibility of the younger generation, but also of the elders to fill this gap with their love, affection and trust. The problem, in fact, has grown and intensified due to rise in complexities of modern life.
These complexities have arisen in the wake of modernism as faster industrialisation with increasing population has led to greater competition. The problem arises when parents begin to take things too seriously and forget that as children they had themselves loved adventure and freedom. On the other hand, children too are in the blind race of enjoying life and following their friends