From Wikipedia, the
free encyclopedia
Retro is a term used to
describe the culture of the past.
Usage
“Retro” can be used to simply mean
“old fashioned” or old, functioning much like “timeless”
or “classic”. It has also been associated with
modernism in the immediate post-war years,
encompassing an aesthetic that ranges from
tail fins on
Cadillacs to
ranch houses. Sometimes, it can also suggest an
entire outlook on life, for example,
social conservatism,
home schooling or the embrace of traditional
gender roles. “Retro” can also be applied to forms
of technological obsolescence, for example, manual
typewriters,
cash registers, bulky hand-held
cell phones, or the resurrection of old
computer games. But most commonly, “retro” is used
to describe objects and attitudes from the recent past
that no longer seem “modern.” It suggests a fundamental
shift in the way we relate to the past. Different from
more traditional forms of revivalism, “retro” suggests a
half ironic, half longing consideration of the recent
past. It has been called an “unsentimental nostalgia,”
recalling “modern” forms that are no longer current.
Today is often used in a positive
sense, referring to quirky or attractive products that
are no longer available. For example, "Retro fashion" or
"Retro Chic" may consist of outdated styles, such as
tie-dyed shirts from the 1960s, or poodle skirts
from the 1950s. A love of retro objects (things from the
past) is called retrophilia.
Retro often reflects a sensibility
aligned with
camp. Camp is an ironic attitude, an explicit
re-introduction of non-dominant forms.
Retro also can mean a type of music
like Hip Hop.
Origin
“Retro” has long been used as a
prefix, intended to suggest that which is past or
derivative. In the postwar period, it increased in usage
with the advent of
retrorockets used by the US space program in the
1950s and 1960s. It gained cultural currency with French
reevaluations of
Charles de Gaulle and that country’s role in
World War II. The French mode retro of the 1970s
reappraised in film and novels the conduct of French
civilians during the Nazi occupation. The term “retro”
was soon applied to nostalgic French fashions that
recalled the same period.
Shortly it was coined into English by
the fashion and culture press, where it suggests a
rather cynical revival of older but relatively recent
fashions. (Elizabeth E. Guffey, Retro: The Culture of
Revival, pp. 9-22). In Simulacra and Simulation,
French theorist
Jean Baudrillard describes retro as a
demythologization of the past, distancing the
present from the big ideas that drove the “modern” age
(Jean Baudrillard, Simulacra and Simulation, p.
43).
Specific
types of retro
Retrogaming
Retrogaming is a pastime which is becoming
increasingly popular where individuals play
video games on vintage computers and games
consoles; although the idea of what constitutes a
vintage or retro machine is one open to debate.
Retro cars
Retro cars are newly designed
cars such as the
Toyota FJ Cruiser,
PT Cruiser,
Plymouth Prowler,
MINI,
New Beetle, or 2005-present
Ford Mustang that take many of their style cues from
(respectively) the
Chrysler Airflow, the
1932 Ford, the
Austin Mini, the
VW Bug, and 1965-70
Ford Mustang without using any of the original
technologies.
Retro
music
Retro also refers to a genre
of music, particularly dance music, popular in the U.S.
during the 1980s and originally termed
New Wave music which was in part an outgrowth of the
Punk rock genre of the 1970s and early '80s. Many of
the songs and albums now termed Retro came about during
great advancement in the development of generating music
electronically (that is, with computers and electronic
equipment - or
Electronic music - rather than with either
traditional or electromechanical instruments) and the
popularization of this type of music in the mainstream.
Ideas as to how broad and inclusive the Retro category
of music is vary; nonetheless, not all music - not even
all dance music - from the decade of the 1980s can be
considered Retro.
Retro Metal (i.e. "The
mid-2000s Retro metal movement" (All Music Guide/Rolling
Stone). In the mid-2000s, a rise in popularity of
hard rock music combining
classic rock elements with
psychedelia,
heavy metal and modern hard rock came to prominence
among
Generation Y and others, with such bands as
Wolfmother,
The Sword,
Jet and
Buckcherry becoming very successful using methods of
past bands such as
Led Zeppelin,
Black Sabbath,
The Jimi Hendrix Experience,
The Beatles and
Pink Floyd. While the strength of the "movement" has
been argued by some music critics on both sides, "retro"
or "heritage metal" has become a commong term for
trendy hard rock.