{"version": "1.0", "type": "rich", "title": "I suppose another take on Marianne Williamson and the neomystic turn generally is it\u2019s a turn inward. It takes all the energy...", "author_name": "kontextmaschine", "author_url": "https://kontextmaschine.com", "provider_name": "kontextmaschine", "provider_url": "https://kontextmaschine.com", "url": "https://kontextmaschine.com/post/186689005633/", "html": "<p>I suppose <a href=\"/post/186673401398/\" target=\"_blank\">another</a> take on Marianne Williamson and the neomystic turn generally is it\u2019s a turn inward. It takes all the energy floating about that had been aimed at society and structure and turns it to self and sensibility. And that\u2019s a thing that happens, and you\u2019d kind of expect it to happen around now, and diverted into culture the energy can even get pretty golden-agey as the dialectic grinds towards synthesis.</p><p>That\u2019s the social unrest of the 60s diverting into the \u201cMe Decade\u201d 70s and \u201cMorning in America\u201d 80s. That\u2019s the revolutionary period of the 1910s being suppressed in the First Red Scare and yielding to the Roaring Twenties, the Jazz Age, the Harlem Renaissance.</p><p>That\u2019s second-wave feminism falling to an \u201880s pincer move between cultural conservatives and S&amp;M postmodernists \u2013 falling as a <i>sociopolitical project</i>. And then its themes got turned inward and coopted and reemerged in the 90s as Wicca, as Lilith Fair, as lesbian chic, as riot grrl, as Xena and Scully and Buffy, as the music I think of as VH1core chick-rock \u2013 Shawn Colvin, Natalie Merchant, Meredith Brooks, Paula Cole. As a sensibility, a subculture, a product, an aesthetic (that could be digested into more products, into Target collections and remodeling TV about shiplap and healthy relationships)</p>"}