kokopelle: (Sinfest - Devil Booth)
I’ve been seeing postings on FB about the increased sexuality of young adults. I found myself thinking “and what else is new?”Today this was topped off with a link to a Times article about casual sex being good for a person. It was presented as breaking news. I sense that I am slipping to a generational time-warp, and that everything old is new again!

Agewise, I come in at the very end of the Boomers II generation and at the very beginning of the Generation X generation. I came to age during the 70s and went to high school and college during the 80s. The ending of Vietnam was on the fringe of my childhood memories. I remember Watergate as a passing news item. Disco had its heyday while I was still too young to dance to the beats. Personal computers came into the scene while the Cold War exited the stage.

Back to the topic, in my day sexual activity was going on between young adults. The party seemed to come to an end when AIDS was fully realized in the social consciousness. No longer were STDs a boogey-man that that could be cured with a shot. Now a person could die from sex, and there were too many years during which AIDS was not fully understood. Sex was dangerous and the fear was both real and imagined. The outcome was extreme caution.

Twenty-five years later, marking time from when the television movie The Ryan White Story aired, sexuality seems to be back in fashion. Some may say it is because of the media and advertising. Perhaps, but movies today are pretty tame compared to the sexploitation movies of the late 60s and 70s. Advertisement runs off of sex, but a review of ads of years past shows that innuendo is not new, and in fact, some old ads were racier in context than any amount of skin shown now. In my opinion, the apparent revival of sexuality has less apparent roots.

AIDS is a distant or non-memory in the minds of today’s young adults. This is combined with the weird social artifact of “generational amnesia”, or put another way, everything old is new again. The young adult bloggers of today are of the Millenniums generation, born between 1977-1994. The sex, drugs and rock-n-roll of pre-AIDS days is completely unknown to their living experience. With the fear AIDS diminishing, the thaw in sexuality seems to be a new blossoming instead of just another swing of the pendulum.

Are we on the cusp of a new decade of sexual freedom? I have to wonder. I also wonder if the painful lessons of past generations are lost on the today’s bloggers and writers. The old is new. Pendulums swing, each generation learns on its own time, and I stand as an aging witness to the turning of sexual cycles.
kokopelle: (I Want to Believe)
A friend on Facebook posted an article on Salon with the title “David Foster Wallace was right: Irony is ruining our culture”. The URL is http://www.salon.com/2014/04/13/david_foster_wallace_was_right_irony_is_ruining_our_culture/ .

My friend shared the quote from the article:

"At one time, irony served to reveal hypocrisies, but now it simply acknowledges one’s cultural compliance and familiarity with pop trends. The art of irony has lost its vision and its edge. The rebellious posture of the past has been annexed by the very commercialism it sought to defy."

Commercialized irony is humor in disguise. The maligned irony is society's reluctant acknowledgement of truths in disguise. True irony is alive and well, with many more hypocrisies yet to be uncovered. Irony is dead, long live irony!

The authors long dialogue about irony makes me thing about the revelations that each generation realizes, and then calls their own.  It is my personal opinion that every generation has to have their own "revelations". It does that matter that countless generations have had the same ones time and time again. We human beings learn little from previous generations. Each generation must realize these “truths” on their own. Some examples:

God is dead, Now God is alive
War is useful, Now war is bad
Smoking is cool, Now smoking is bad for your health
Everyone over age X is clueless, oh shoot now I'm over age X
AND... irony is dead, wait, it is very much alive.


Can the next generation queue up for self-enlightenment?

The article author also tried to point out that cultural snark has ruined society’s culture. I believe that cultural snark has always defined popular culture. The vision of a genteel age, with a seamy underside, is a myth. Most ages have been thoroughly seamy, in their own special way. The past perfect age, or future perfect age, is a desirable longing, but it is just an illusion. Today is the tomorrow of yesterday, and not much has changed.

April 2020

S M T W T F S
   1 23 4
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
2627282930  

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Apr. 12th, 2026 07:09 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios