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The Slow Cancellation of Culture

In decades past, popular culture felt fresh and innovative. For a high school student during the latter half of the 2010s, exploring culture was exciting. Reminiscing on this era, I’m flooded with memories of discussing leaked streetwear collaborations with friends in the cafeteria and concealing my phone in my English class to compete with full-grown…
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Maxis, Mead, and Misanthropy

In this atomized age, the strive for simplicity can be seen through the adoption of neo-traditionality, which is visible in many unconnected aspects of popular culture. Fashion trends like cottage or Catholic core, lifestyle trends like traditional diets, homesteading, or embracing religion—by grasping at these straws, one may just be able to find a sliver…
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Fashion Kinks

In the last two centuries fashion has moved in a 20-year trend cycle. What is considered to be popular now can typically be traced back to some trend from 20 years prior, and while this cycle has started to speed up (see Accelerationism in Fashion), it’s still a generally accepted rule in the industry. Though…
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THE DEATH OF SUBCULTURE

For decades, subcultures like punk, grunge, and goth have been a muse for high-fashion houses and fast-fashion brands. With the origins of these subcultures being working-class youth, this inspiration (or appropriation) marked a massive shift in fashion and the way trends are formed. But in the following decades, as more brands referenced punk, any semblance…
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Taking The Ted-Pill

“The industrial revolution and its consequences have been a disaster for the human race” is a phrase that has been increasingly repeated over the past five years. While this phrase may seem innocent, it’s the opening line of Industrial Society and Its Future, the manifesto of Theodore “Ted” Kaczynski, better known as the Unabomber
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Guillotines & Ripped Jeans

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TikTok & Shein: Accelerationism in Fashion


