The Frozen Culture: How Capital Markets Fractured Our Cultural Evolution
<p>Think with me about the entrenched ideologies of capital markets. Those of which have restricted cultural dynamism in recent decades, I am arguing that we must loosen this systemic grip through boundary-pushing creativity and grassroots reimagining of values to revitalize cultural identities.</p>
<h1>Cultural Flux in the Early- to Mid-20th Century</h1>
<p><img alt="" src="https://miro.medium.com/v2/resize:fit:875/1*IjiCZ5JDzfloUdthJwmIHA.png" style="height:400px; width:700px" /></p>
<p>A vintage rendition of 1960’s consumerism and nuclear-family lifestyle</p>
<p>Cultural shifts were more frequent from the 1920s to 1980s because that period saw greater flux in capital markets. The 1920s marked the beginning of mass consumerism. The following decades saw the expansion of credit, advertising, mass media — tools that allowed capital markets to redefine social values.</p>
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