Undertow
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- Des Moines, IA, US
Have you ever wondered why a sub-group of people would be so interested in a time in world history underlined for its brutality; i.e. WWII? Have you ever wondered why modern culture has suddenly taken to "vintage" clothing and ocassionally pines for "the good old days"?
I wonder these things, of course, and as I was reading a book War is the Force that Gives Us Meaning, by Chris Hedges, I found an entry particularly interesting.
Do you think what he says has any bearing in your life? Or perhaps this doesn't reflect on us, the Fedora Lounge, so much, but maybe it explains levels of patriotism after 09/11 and the seemingly constant upheaval of culture after each conflict in which we're involved?
"Art takes on a whole new significance in wartime. War and the nationalist myth that fuels it are the purveyors of low culture - folklore, quasi-historical dramas, kitsch, sentimental doggerel, and theater and film that portray the glory of soldiers in past wars or current wars dying nobly for the homeland. This is why so little of what moves us during wartime has any currency once war is over. The songs, books, poems and films that arouse us in war are awkward and embarrassing when the conflict ends, useful only to summon up the nostalgia of war's comradeship."
What are your thoughts?
I wonder these things, of course, and as I was reading a book War is the Force that Gives Us Meaning, by Chris Hedges, I found an entry particularly interesting.
Do you think what he says has any bearing in your life? Or perhaps this doesn't reflect on us, the Fedora Lounge, so much, but maybe it explains levels of patriotism after 09/11 and the seemingly constant upheaval of culture after each conflict in which we're involved?
"Art takes on a whole new significance in wartime. War and the nationalist myth that fuels it are the purveyors of low culture - folklore, quasi-historical dramas, kitsch, sentimental doggerel, and theater and film that portray the glory of soldiers in past wars or current wars dying nobly for the homeland. This is why so little of what moves us during wartime has any currency once war is over. The songs, books, poems and films that arouse us in war are awkward and embarrassing when the conflict ends, useful only to summon up the nostalgia of war's comradeship."
What are your thoughts?