Nostalgia, is a national disease?

The Good Old Days, when things were all rosy and better.

The Good Old Days, when we had real music, etc etc

It seems to me that nostalgia is a sort of national disease, we keep harping back to it as some golden age, except it wasn't really and every generation has it's Golden Age.. I was struck by nostalgia for the 1990's, I mean really, what was so great about the nineties?

I think this constant harping on about how great things were years ago, stops us moving forward, it stops us investing in the future, personally, politically and in thingd like our infrastructure and buildings.

I'm an historian by training and I hate nostalgia, for its distortions, the way it stops us being honest about the past, the effects it's had upon us and the world and the lengths we will go to to protect it's leftovers. I do think think archaelogical sites should be protected and historic buildings, but that should stop us from investing in the new. The past should inform the present, we should learn its lessons, and build a better future, even if it's just in our architecture and music.

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  • The nineties only really lasted until late 1994. Creatively it was a good era, but as deritive as everything that came before it. In many ways it was a purge, post recession. New found optimism. 

    I mean I am reading about the BBC tonight, that fills me with dread. This is an organisation that hugely selfpublisises but is flawed at its core because it does listen to the license payers and shows little awareness of the time it lives in now. Because these are National instititions which are fundementaly corrupt and rife with nepotism. Presenters more worried about their pay than anything else. The public has paid way too much for entertainment for so long now.

  • everyone was on drugs [can I say that]

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