The lure of nostalgia is safety. You already know the outcome; you survived. Find someone who yearns for yesterday and you've probably found someone who is afraid of tomorrow.He quickly received a number of positive comments, and elaborated a bit...
... I think there is a distinct difference between appreciating something, remembering it fondly, and yearning, which connotes, to me at least, an aching quality. We can ache for a past that includes loved ones we miss or happy events without necessarily feeling fear of what tomorrow may bring. But I think the less specific way in which some people view the past in a nostalgic way -- that vague sense that it was all better yesterday -- is fueled by the comfort of knowing we made it through the trials and tribulations we faced and the fear of not knowing whether we will be able to do the same with today's or tomorrow's challenges. That's really what the thought was all about.How much of that plays into reading comics then? How much of reading the same title month in and month out for decades on end is an appreciation of the character, and how much is an appreciation of what those stories helped you with when you first started reading it? I mean...
If you read Detective Comics because you think Batman is cool, that's one thing. But if you read Detective Comics because you really related to the stories that were being told in the title years ago when you were feeling alone and alienated in high school and you don't think the current creators really get Batman the same way that they did back then, that's something else entirely.
The problem, of course, is being able to recognize that distinction (or one like it) in yourself. Because an emotional shift like that tends not to happen overnight. It's a gradual process, and not one that's easily quantifiable either. So you wind up reading the same comics for decades with only the vague sense that the stories aren't nearly as good now as they used to be. It takes some time for you to stop and consciously contemplate why you're reading the books you're reading, and whether or not that's based on the actual (and current) merits of the book or it's primarily a holdover from days gone by.
You could still enjoy the book, and even enjoy it for very different reasons than before, but if you're enjoyment is based more on nostalgia than anything else it might be time to see what's going on in your life NOW and what you might respond better to.
2 comments:
Great quote. When people get nostalgic, all of those things they didn't care for or agree with vanish from the picture. For instance, those who year for the 1950s forget that blacks were subservient, women who worked were considered loose, nice families didn't tell others about abuse, and there was a major stigma placed on innocent children who happened to be born to women without benefit of marriage.
I sincerely hope people are not yearning for the negatives when they look back, but they don't look at the dirt in the corners. Just today, someone said something about it not being safe for children to solicit door-to-door, "like it was" when the speaker was young. In truth, it is no more dangerous now. We merely are more awware and willing to discuss those dangers.
Nice article! I've thought about this a good bit as well - a certain amount of nostalgia comes from remembering something Better than it actually was. I've had many a painful awakenings as I viewed some cherished movie from my childhood only to discover it was really quite bad (Doc Savage Man of Bronze, I'm looking at you.)
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