TMC
08-16-2019, 01:02 AM
You often hear that the real 1950s was nothing like the 1950s (https://www.amateurwriting.net/infusions/writings/writings.php?view=writing&wid=573) portrayed in film and on TV (https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1987-11-01-ca-18034-story.html) and other forms of popular culture. Where was the disconnect? Were they trying to make the world brighter (https://www.reddit.com/r/AskHistorians/comments/29t1cv/why_did_everything_get_so_wholesome_in_the_1950s/) after the war?
I don't want to get too political around here, but since '50s were so long ago, was it really all about nostalgia (https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2012/feb/26/catherine-bennett-50s-nostalgia) from those that were alive during it, especially those that were teens or kids? It's kind of like how millennials today, like to romanticize the '90s (the end of the Cold War, good economy, pre-9/11, start of the internet, etc.). They remember it as some utopia when probably really it wasn’t.
I suppose that this started in the '70s (https://the-artifice.com/nifty-fifty-american-myth-1970s/), when the '50s nostalgia hit a high and people started to remember it as some utopia of "goodness and pureness" (http://screenprism.com/insights/article/were-movies-of-the-1950s-as-white-washed-as-later-depictions-of-the-era) and no crimes, etc. And going back to the subject, this reason is why shows like Happy Days (https://travsd.wordpress.com/2019/03/01/happy-days-and-the-50s-nostalgia-boom/) and films like American Graffiti (https://thedissolve.com/features/movie-of-the-week/468-keynote-american-graffiti-and-george-lucas-nostalg/)were made.
I don't want to get too political around here, but since '50s were so long ago, was it really all about nostalgia (https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2012/feb/26/catherine-bennett-50s-nostalgia) from those that were alive during it, especially those that were teens or kids? It's kind of like how millennials today, like to romanticize the '90s (the end of the Cold War, good economy, pre-9/11, start of the internet, etc.). They remember it as some utopia when probably really it wasn’t.
I suppose that this started in the '70s (https://the-artifice.com/nifty-fifty-american-myth-1970s/), when the '50s nostalgia hit a high and people started to remember it as some utopia of "goodness and pureness" (http://screenprism.com/insights/article/were-movies-of-the-1950s-as-white-washed-as-later-depictions-of-the-era) and no crimes, etc. And going back to the subject, this reason is why shows like Happy Days (https://travsd.wordpress.com/2019/03/01/happy-days-and-the-50s-nostalgia-boom/) and films like American Graffiti (https://thedissolve.com/features/movie-of-the-week/468-keynote-american-graffiti-and-george-lucas-nostalg/)were made.