http://www.wired.com/magazine/2010/12/ff_angrynerd_geekculture/all/1Interesting article claiming that what was once geek culture has now become mainstream.
I've heard rumors of the world that the author describes coming from across the ocean. But I don't see it here in Belgium. I only see it on the Internet. And in Belgium, the Internet is (still?) not very representative of what happens in real life.
Europe in general seems to have had an ambiguous relationship with pop culture. It never really took over everything. Maybe it hasn't been long enough. There's still people alive who remember a world without cars, without television, without pop music. And part of us has always cherished this memory. The USA always seemed more open to adopt pop culture.
I do hopefully agree with the author that the end of pop culture is nigh. Like modernism before it and capitalism soon, it will collapse under its own weight.
But I don't agree that there is no room for sub-cultures and individual taste anymore. Hell, one look at the sales figures of
Fatale tells me the exact opposite!
There's plenty of things that have no chance to become mainstream in the current climate. Possibly because those things are essentially
anti-pop and appeal only to intellectuals and their ilk. Maybe intellectuals are the new otaku -given that the mainstream Internet culture celebrates stupidity above anything else. It's a difficult situation to be in, given that survival in pop culture is not for the fittest but for the most popular. But it's probably something we should hold on to as much as we can, and find a way to sustain. Maybe it will survive the coming blast.