Lost Generation discussion
What constitutes someone as a "Lost Generation" writer?
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I think I would prefer to read a writer from the first group, without going into ay deeper divisions. Being that any writer who lived in the Lost Generation period and went through most of the things that people at that time went through, are considered to be Lost Generation writers.
To me, it's about the literature they produced and not the literary club they created.

I think I would prefer to read a writer from the first group, without going into ay deeper divisions. Being that any writer who lived in the Lost Generation period and went through most of the things that people at that time went through, are considered to be Lost Generation writers.
To me, it's about the literature they produced and not the literary club they created.
But I'd say the writings of Ford Madox fit the bill, and Dos Passos' gloomy stories, especially Three Soldiers, are very lost generation-esque as well.
But I'm wondering. Is it just people who had some affiliation with the first WW1 and survived? Is Wodehouse lost-gen, technically?
What do you all think? How do you go about classifying a writer as Lost Gen?