Simon82
One of the Regulars
- Messages
- 143
- Location
- Central Alabama
It's a rhetorical question, because I know the answer is "no." (For one thing, I could never be comfortable with pants up to my armpits.)
I can't speak for anyone else, but a lot of my love for the 30s and 40s era is one fpr something "lost" (although I'm too young to have "had" it), of not just manners and styles but ways of thinking that seem to be long gone.
My guess is that even if I stepped out of Doc's DeLorean wearing my 30s style fedora, a nice Golden Era suit and ready to show off my swing-dance moves, I'd stand out like a K-Car in a Deusenberg lot.
Why? Because I'd be looking *backward.* Most of the people who instigated all the great styles, slang, literature, movies and other great stuff that period was known for, were looking *forward.* Innovations. Streamlining. Plastic. Nylon. Art Deco. Progress. The future.
Sure there were people then who pined for the horse-and-buggy and who fretted over "Reefer Madness," but as far as I know, they're not represented as the people to emulate from the Golden Era on The Fedora Lounge.
So in my roundabout way of asking, does anyone else feel like they're borrowing against someone else's currency by looking back so much at a time long past? Or can we take the best of then and figure out how to make it work tomorrow?
I can't speak for anyone else, but a lot of my love for the 30s and 40s era is one fpr something "lost" (although I'm too young to have "had" it), of not just manners and styles but ways of thinking that seem to be long gone.
My guess is that even if I stepped out of Doc's DeLorean wearing my 30s style fedora, a nice Golden Era suit and ready to show off my swing-dance moves, I'd stand out like a K-Car in a Deusenberg lot.
Why? Because I'd be looking *backward.* Most of the people who instigated all the great styles, slang, literature, movies and other great stuff that period was known for, were looking *forward.* Innovations. Streamlining. Plastic. Nylon. Art Deco. Progress. The future.
Sure there were people then who pined for the horse-and-buggy and who fretted over "Reefer Madness," but as far as I know, they're not represented as the people to emulate from the Golden Era on The Fedora Lounge.
So in my roundabout way of asking, does anyone else feel like they're borrowing against someone else's currency by looking back so much at a time long past? Or can we take the best of then and figure out how to make it work tomorrow?