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Homemade home : creating in the face of the nostalgic impulse
Author(s) -
Hannah Reeves
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
mospace institutional repository (university of missouri)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Dissertations/theses
DOI - 10.32469/10355/5634
Subject(s) - impulse (physics) , computer science , face (sociological concept) , world wide web , computer graphics (images) , sociology , physics , social science , quantum mechanics
Nostalgia is a pervasive and widely accepted form of dishonesty. Throughout American history, people have made and collected objects, upheld traditions, and revered styles and forms of past eras with the aim of recreating or re-experiencing some past good, but omitting large portions of the history surrounding the sentimentalized object or idea. That nostalgia is an ongoing and thoroughgoing fixture of American life is not surprising, considering the comfort that many of its practitioners claim it yields. The promise of comfort in the face of the difficulty and isolation of individualism may even seem so appealing as to elicit a potent pang of nostalgia that is nearly compulsory. This initial nostalgic experience, if indulged, can become a practice of reliance on the familiar and denial of the unknown, for the sake of comfort. The cost of this perceived comfort, however, is the honesty required for self-creation. Idealization of the past, faulty remembering, and the blind acceptance of traditions all create the illusion of comfort and prevent an understanding of reality.

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