AmateisGal
I'll Lock Up
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Oh I'm not suggesting the people in the article are this way at all. Just making a general point in response to Lizzie's comment about "vintage" consumerism.
Got it.
Oh I'm not suggesting the people in the article are this way at all. Just making a general point in response to Lizzie's comment about "vintage" consumerism.
Some of the most "vintage" people I've ever known have no idea that there even is such a thing as a "vintage scene," and would gape with amazement at the sight of well-to-do white-collar folks spending hundreds or even thousands of dollars in order to dress up as a CIO factory hand c. 1937.
I was in Brooklyn two weekends ago and, holy cow, these people really do exist. From the beard down through the very expensive jeans work shirt, work pants and to the out-of-the-thirties boots. Yes, I've seen them before and in Manhattan regularly, but Brooklyn has quite a concentration of this trying-very-hard-to-look-vintage population. And my unscientific observation is that it is much more a guy thing a woman thing. I would assume, since it is so popular and well-known, that its time of being hip is probably about over (but what I know about being hip could be captured on the back of a postage stamp with room left over).
Recently I visited a friend whose dad is now 97 and quite lucid and active. He was sitting in the living room kind of vacantly staring at the TV... My friend said "Hey Pop, you alright??" He replied, "Why they talk so fast... everything too fast... I can't understand why they go so fast... !?!?"
Reminds me of one of my wife's relations. I met her when she was 103 years old. Very bright, well read (first female grad of Baylor University, and her long gone husband had been the first Rhodes Scholar from Texas) and a great conversationalist. She apologized for not being as up on current events as she would have liked: "Only U.S. News and World Report has a large print edition, and I don't think that they do such a great job of covering the news in depth."
Had she not been a devout Baptist lady, she's the kind of person I would have brought a bottle of whatever single malt Scotch she drinks to and told her: "You talk, I'll pour." People like that are such a great source of information, wisdom, and inspiration.
I think for someone born in 1875, before the telephone and the electric light, who was an adult when powered flight and automobiles became a reality, who was moving into middle age when broadcasting was invented, and who lived long enough to look into a glowing box in their living room and see a human being set foot on the moon, the course of the world over their lifetime must've seemed absolutely inconceivable.
In fact, if Onion had read any socio-technical theory, she'd realize that Chrisman is using technology exactly in a way that many people who are concerned about modern technologies do. These "types" use modern technologies in a subversive way- because they believe there is not evil in the actual technology BUT in the way it is misused. Therefore, Chrisman by using a blog, writing books, appearing on TV; is using these technologies in a way that she see's as the "proper" use of such media. In this way Chrisman is being subversive in using the technology to spread her message of anti-modernity.
Things we take for granted today (how many people are accessing this conversation via a pocketable device while recreating at some lakeside campsite?) were wildest science fiction not so long ago. I suspect we'll soon adopt other fantastic technologies and come to regard them as ordinary as buttons on a shirt.
There's a whole group of people who like to wear their "vintageness" on their sleeves for the whole world to see, while they bang their chests and say "look at me!...see, I'm into the 'X-era' lifestyle..." But what they're really doing is showing off the fact that they can afford a Victorian house stuffed with antique and reproduction knick knacks and shiny baubles, antique cars and vacations at the lake where they can wear their seersucker suits and boater hats. They look down their noses at regular "modern" working-class stiffs as the gullible and unenlightened. The working class of the Golden Era, or any other era, weren't living that way out some whacked sense of superiority, they lived that way because that's just the way it was. They weren't making a statement, they were simply trying to get by and live their lives the best they could.
Therefore, anyone who finds anything appealing about any of those periods in history simply must be a morally bankrupt bigot, and should be routinely chastised and berated for their backwards lifestyle with at least as much intolerance as in their perceived version of the past.
If only they could see the irony.
*This is sarcasm, of course.
We had a thread here on exactly that topic several years ago. Our anti-modernity is nothing if not cutting-edge.
Meanwhile, the Chrismans, whether they like it or not, have become the personal punching bags for every would-be snarking comedian on the Internet, and unlike Onion's piece, which at least tries to approach the question in a mild-tempered way, most of what's been written has a level of viciousness and violent hatred that far surpasses the "offensiveness" of anything the Chrismans have written, said, or done. I've seen several comments urging Mrs. Chrisman to die in childbirth "for the real Victorian experience," and anyone who thinks they're scoring points with filth like that is in no position to criticize anything anyone else says, writes, or does. As I said before, it really does seem to be a matter of people feeling personally threatened by what they're doing.
It was the utter dehumanization of it that they didn't anticipate.
I posted an abridged version of this in response to the same topic over on the Facebook group for the Fedora Lounge, and I believe it's appropriate here as well.
Nowadays, people think we're living in the most tolerant, most morally advanced time in history, and any given point more than twenty-five years or so in the past was nothing but oppression and misery for everyone but the ones doing the oppressing. They, in their own words, see what these people are doing as "indefensible", just as any fondness for any particular time or era in history before say 1990 is, and they feel the vitriol they spew needs to be as vicious as possible in hopes that these truly reprehensible beings might see the error of their "evil" ways of seeing anything good in the past. Because obviously, there was nothing good in the past, only famine, disease, discrimination, institutionalized oppression, and so on. (Thankfully today we live in a time when all evil in the world has been eradicated.*) In their eyes, if one were to favor certain aspects of such an era, they are by extension promoting all those evils. Therefore, anyone who finds anything appealing about any of those periods in history simply must be a morally bankrupt bigot, and should be routinely chastised and berated for their backwards lifestyle with at least as much intolerance as in their perceived version of the past.
If only they could see the irony.
*This is sarcasm, of course.