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Since almost everything is cyclical, it fills me with dread to contemplate what aspects of our present culture will inspire a nostalgia wave in the future.
Factually, the term retro could even apply to going far back into history and thus to prove that retro is and will always have an attraction, look at the movies being made that are hits! Gladiator, the movie 300, to name just two. People view those movies to see what it was like back then and to follow the story line of what took place.One very recent example of this was the "nostalgia wave" of the 1970s that gave us Grease and Happy Days. Compared to that, one thing can be said for the current trend: at least we aren't romantically idealizing it!
I will come back from the dead and haunt this earth like crazy, if fifty to a hundred years, the "hip" thing to do is to wear yer pants half down to yer ankles!Since almost everything is cyclical, it fills me with dread to contemplate what aspects of our present culture will inspire a nostalgia wave in the future.
I will come back from the dead and haunt this earth like crazy, if fifty to a hundred years, the "hip" thing to do is to wear yer pants half down to yer ankles!
It is interesting to see the points of views.. Not to be too off base, but I should write a book on eating hot sauce and beans and claim it will be the demise of a Porter House Steak Dinner and the places that would serve such a tasty meal!Some big claims, but I thought it was interesting to read nonetheless:
http://www.salon.com/books/history/index.html?story=/mwt/feature/2011/08/05/retromania_simon_reynolds_interview
They'd call it, "wearing tails...naturally"!Even worse, they won't be wearing pants at all. And they'll call it "vintage inspired." :yuck:
You make me think of something that will in time more than not become factual, and in part we here on the Lounge may have more input then we can imagine. Here is the example of my thoughts....we wear Fedora hats, and vintage clothing...there are younger people that "LOVE" the look and pick it up when then can afford to...and guess what, the retro look is here to stay again! I think in reality, that is the likely outcome.Since almost everything is cyclical, it fills me with dread to contemplate what aspects of our present culture will inspire a nostalgia wave in the future.
Will nostalgia destroy pop culture?
Gee, I hope so.
And people like him will continue enshrining the myth of the '60s to future generations. That's why I call it "The Era That Won't Go Away." And without getting political it seems to me that a certain segment of the Baby Boomer generation themselves never really left 1968.
If the changes were anything but cosmetic, I'd agree. Culture is still on the same trajectory it's always been. Same meal as ever - now with a garnish of parsley. No practical difference (who eats the parsley anyway?) but somehow, when there's a sprig of parsley on the plate, everything just seems better.
One very recent example of this was the "nostalgia wave" of the 1970s that gave us Grease and Happy Days. Compared to that, one thing can be said for the current trend: at least we aren't romantically idealizing it!
Oh you are right about that movie, Harrison Ford in his younger days!The movie that predicted this 30 years ago was "Blade Runner." It showed a junk culture where every time period was mixed together to create some insane hodgepodge. Even languages got mixed together and became "gutter languages." Now only 8 more years for that movie to actually happen...
... Its lazy.
LD
As someone already emntioned, nostalgia has always been with us. In just recent decades, I was surprised to learn that during the early 1970s there was a significant fashion trend to dress and wear makeup like the 1920s and 1930s made popular by the Biba boutique. Director John Waters in one of the Busby Berkeley documentaries said everyone he knew during the 1960s was obsessed with the 1930s. The Bonnie and Clyde movie led to a craze swept the country,(even though faye Dunaway's anachronistic bouffant was distracting.) There was also the 1950s craze that began in the 1970s with American Graffiti and continued through most of the 1980s.
The movie that predicted this 30 years ago was "Blade Runner." It showed a junk culture where every time period was mixed together to create some insane hodgepodge. Even languages got mixed together and became "gutter languages." Now only 8 more years for that movie to actually happen...
I have very strong memories of the '30s fad of the early '70s. Liberty magazine was revived around 1971, reprinting articles from the Era, and I was probably their youngest reader. And there was a show called "Happy Days" on CBS that had nothing whatsoever to do with Richie and Fonzie -- it was a variety hour featuring surviving '30s personalities and various pastiche sketches based on thirties pop culture. I might be the only person who remembers watching it, but it existed.
You can even find polka channels if that's what you want.
I think that many Fedora Loungers have often already gone through periods of intense interest in previous eras of pop culture before the mainstream "discovers" them. The denizens of the FL have already moved on to different, "new-to-them" periods and will have moved on once again long before the mainstream has latched onto it. An example of this is my own interest in the "Mad Men" '60s ended nearly twenty years ago but now it's all the rage in so many ways. Most of us have been interested in various eras and it won't stop because current trends have "caught up" with us.
So I'll meet you all in La Belle Époque ...that is, if everyone's not already finished with it.
Will nostalgia destroy pop culture?