It's not a matter of what effect did the lost generation have on World War I. They didn't do much. They just fled to Europe. However, World War I had an effect on The Lost Generation. It caused them to move to Europe. They wanted to escape America, because they didn't particularly like post WWI American values.
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yes there was 4 actually
Austria- Hungary
What was the French "Plan 17".
It was the alians came an made the world spin around$$
The term "Lost Generation" was popularized by writer Gertrude Stein in the 1920s, who heard her French garage owner speak of his young auto mechanics as "une génération perdue" (a lost generation). The term later became associated with the disillusioned post-World War I generation of writers and artists, including Ernest Hemingway and F. Scott Fitzgerald.
Yes, WWI did create a "lost generation", which is what they refer to the survivors of WWI. However, this "lost" generation isn't exactly lost as in lost and found. This generation was lost in thought, because the Lost Generation did not know what to do after the war, and they felt depressed and scared. What they were lost in was in thought, and what they lost was hope and a feeling of security.
Generation Lost was created on 2006-12-05.
Gertrude Stein referred to the artists and writers of the post-WWI period as the "Lost Generation." This term captured the sense of disillusionment and aimlessness felt by many individuals who came of age during the turmoil of World War I.
a lost generation
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Germany
'The Lost Generation' is the term used to describe those who fought in World War I. Members of the lost generation were born between between the years of 1883 and 1900.
Pablo Picasso, the lost generation of Gertruide Stein, Ernest Hemingway, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ezra Pound, Sherwood Anderson, Waldo Peirce, and John Dos Passos
the great depression
Idfk know.
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