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Tag: tradition

Memory, Meaning, and Cultural Survival: Art in a Post-Technocratic World

There are moments in a civilization when the question is no longer how to improve the system, but how to remain human within it. We live in an era of speed, saturation, and perpetual mediation, yet meaning, memory, and belonging feel thinner than ever. This dialogue continues an exploration not of collapse as spectacle, but of orientation: what anchors us when institutions wobble, when attention fragments, and when technology quietly replaces participation with observation. If earlier discussions examined sovereignty and authorship, this one turns to something older and deeper — the arts — not as decoration, but as the connective tissue of culture itself.

The Loneliness in the Feed

In a time when personal identity is marketed for clicks and connection is curated through screens, I find myself reflecting on the narratives we chase — and the ones we quietly grieve. This thread explores the intersection of digital performance, generational longing, and the search for something more grounded, more meaningful, and maybe even more human.