So, I'm finished with the '50s and am immersing myself in the '60s, which I consider to be one of the two most interesting periods of the 20th century, for all the change that it brought (the other is the '20s).
A quote from
Rudi Gernrich in 1969:
Haute Couture doesn't have the same meaning any more, because money, status and power no longer have
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... and yet, there is still -- and I think will always be -- huge coercive, normative forces exerted on huge portions of the populus by 'power'. More than ever we're in a commoditised culture, a 'blockbuster' one where Stephanie Meyer is the new J K Rowling, or Kanye is the new Brittney, or whatever. 'A never-ending succession of specatacles.' Not to sound like a grumpy old Marxist (oh, OK then, I do sound like a grumpy old Marxist) but I've never seen that 'participation' in this commodity culture (with fan-fic or whatever) is anything other than 'the old con' of ideology.
On the other hand, technology does allow the disemmination of an awful lot more niches and subcultures than ever before.
If anything, I think the coming (or current) wave of cultural change will be the tension between micro-communities and corporatised mass culture, but I think it's simplistic to think that 'power' is in any way threatened.
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I can't help noticing that increasingly (especially for younger folk) we're seeking our news and information from non-mainstream directions. Places like LJ and FB highlight stuff quicker (and sometimes more effectively) than the media.
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It is a massive reduction in the capital barrier to be a publisher and commentator.
Will this be our big new cultural change?
Bigger than the introduction of movable-type printing in Europe.
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I'm sure that was a huge shift, but what was the impact on architecture, art, music and dress? I'm looking for a cultural shift that affects these things as well as a change in how things happen.
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Now the actual form will be incredibly varied. As txxxpxx pointed out there will be an integration of the technical and the aesthetic. But I certainly wouldn't want to second guess the actual presentation. Fashions and tastes will change; the Calvinist aesthetic of efficiency, to the baroque romanticism expressing lazy wealth.
Apologies for the late response. I spend a couple of days mulling over this.
PS: Sorry about the multiple posts.
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