HudsonHawk
I'll Lock Up
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Does anyone here actually *remember* the 50's? If so, it'd be interesting to here their take.
not at all; marketing simply exploits this tendency of the human brain.
whats the 1940s all about ? guys with big shoulder pads and chalk stripe suits and black and white shoes.
what's the 1920s all about ? flappers in beaded dresses and headbands. guys in spats with tommy guns going rat a tat tat.
What is it about "The Fifties" that allows that fiction to be used as both a weapon and a counterweapon in arguments about the direction of American society?
Does anyone here actually *remember* the 50's? If so, it'd be interesting to here their take.
(in the UK the 40s is by far the most rose-tinted of the decades).
in times of change and economic uncertainty 'good old fashioned values' seem reassuring again; the 50s was the most recent decade for that... in the popular imagination.
But just how did "The Fifties" become enmeshed in the image of "good old fashioned values" when in fact the actual 1950's were the flood tide for "progressive parenting" of the Dr. Spock variety, all sorts of trendy pop psychology ideas that were all over the popular magazines, and soft-pedaled Norman Vincent Peale-style power-of-positive-thinking progressive religion?
It's how the popular imagination has been manipulated that really makes the whole question of "The Fifties" an important one.
Perhaps what we're talking about is a difference between the UK and the US. Here, "The Fifties" have been, and still are, very deliberately used by marketers on both sides of the issue of "social values" to drive opinion in one direction or another -- either as something to be embraced or as something to be resisted. That image of "retro idyll" is a very potent thing in the hands of people who want to sell you a product, or a point of view, and it's becoming much more so the further removed we get from any awareness of the actual 1950s.
I knew from a very early age that in my town in "The Fifties," the hair was worn in a headrag, the aprons were made from old flour sacks, the cars were rusty, and the lawn mowers were even rustier. We weren't allowed to have rose-tinted anything about anything.
I do remember going to a Mid Century exhibit of some sort at the LA County Art Museum. Amongst furniture and clothes and an Avanti Studebaker there was a photograph of a very modern house in the Palm Springs area with huge plate glass windows opening onto a nearly infinite distance. I thought about how we are all living behind walls and gates and such now yet this was built at the height of the Cold War and it is a house that has absolutely no fear of the outside world ... it was designed almost like it was reaching out and beckoning the vista in.
I know if we were living under a similar threat today we wouldn't react that way. Not that I didn't play in plenty of bomb shelters as a kid ... but, in their way, they were symbols of hope too. By the 1980s if you considered surviving an atomic bomb you were sort of treated like a criminal.
In the fifties the Russians were a threat but your neighbors weren't. The Russians were 5000 miles away. It was a different world. Little children played outside all day, all over the neighborhood. "come home when the street lights come on". Have seen pics of a grocery store with a row of baby buggies outside, babies in them, while Mom went inside to do a little shopping. You wouldn't see that today.
In the fifties the Russians were a threat but your neighbors weren't. The Russians were 5000 miles away. It was a different world. Little children played outside all day, all over the neighborhood. "come home when the street lights come on". Have seen pics of a grocery store with a row of baby buggies outside, babies in them, while Mom went inside to do a little shopping. You wouldn't see that today.
Gated communities are less about crime and more about fear and paranoia.
There are very violent places in the United States. Unsurprisingly, few rich people live there.