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    Evan ProdromouE
    @Canadian_Eh great exhibit at the Musée de beaux arts in Montreal! https://www.mbam.qc.ca/en/exhibitions/kent-monkman/
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    Evan ProdromouE
    @killbait this is an interesting factoid.
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    juergen_hubertJ
    Who Defines Culture? Since May 2025, Germany has a new government coalition led by the Christian Democrats. There are those among the Christian Democrats whom I respect, even if I might not agree with them. But Chancellor Friedrich Merz is not among them. He is a BlackRock creature through and through, extruded to serve American business interests before those of German citizens, and infused with the soul of Diederich Hessling, the protagonist of Heinrich Mann’s “Der Untertan”. I don’t think he is capable of seeing anyone who isn’t a multi-millionaire as a person deserving of dignity and respect – instead, they are resources to be exploited, or alternatively admonished if they do not work themselves to an early grave for the glory of the all-holy Gross Domestic Product.With Merz in charge, my expectations for the members of his cabinet were exceedingly low, and indeed they are every bit the grotesque parodies that Merz himself is. My primary attention – and ire – has been focused on the Minister for the Economy and Energy Katherina Reiche, who has waged a one-woman war against renewable energy, favoring outdated fossil fuel business models that harm Germany just as much as they fill the treasuries of autocrats. The recent Iran War and the closure of the Strait of Hormuz shows the folly of such policies, but I doubt that the Merz cabinet is capable of learning this lesson (or, indeed, any lessons).But another lackey of Merz has recently come to my unwelcome attention – Wolfram Weimer, the Federal Government Commissioner for Culture and the Media. He banned three left-leaning bookstores from participating in an award for independent bookstores, and, after receiving pushback, he canceled the award ceremony altogether. This prompted me to take a closer look at this man, and I did not like what I found.Beyond founding or working for a number of fascist-adjacent conservative magazines and newspapers – Cicero, Die Welt, and so forth – he also seems to hold a number of truly loathsome beliefs. He seems to view cultural identity as something static, inherent in “blood and soil”, rather than something that each generation creates anew. He identifies with the concept of the “Abendland” – “Occident” in English, although this concept is more commonly referred to as “Western Civilization”. And he blames “Decolonization” for the “decline of European supremacy”.There is a lot to unpack here. First of all, we need to recognize that the concepts of “Abendland”, “Occident”, or “Western Civilization” are, at their core, a code for White Supremacy. They reduce the USA and Canada (and other English-language former colonies, for that matter) to nothing more than a cultural appendix of Europe – and thus erase the cultural contributions of the First Nations, Black Americans, Latinos, Asian Americans and others in favor of white people who want to remain on top of the social heap.Americans should feel insulted to have their culture reduced to that of “Europe Lite”. Europeans should think twice before invoking such a racist concept.And by arguing against Decolonization, Weimer makes clear what kind of system he favors – a rich white elite class who alone get to decide what “culture” is, and who gets to impose their vision on everyone else while exploiting them and turning them into serfs.This is not only insulting to non-white people, but to everyone who isn’t rich. And here is where this intersects with my folklore research.For all their faults, the Brothers Grimm understood something about culture that Weimer, Merz, and indeed the entire Epstein Class do not and never will: Culture starts at the bottom, not at the top. The Brothers Grimm were passionate about figuring out what made German culture unique, and their approach was to learn about the tales and customs of the peasant population. This was new and revolutionary in Germany – in previous centuries, scholars paid the poor little heed, or else held them in contempt. But to the Brothers Grimm, and the many other folklore researchers who followed in their footsteps, the thoughts of people who were poor mattered.It wasn’t the peasants sitting around the communal hearth fires who plundered the world and erected monuments to their own vainglory. Instead, they invented stories, developed customs, celebrated festivals, and in general tried to inject a little happiness into their lives which otherwise were full of hard labor and more than a little misery. These people weren’t perfect – plenty of folk tales display more than a little moral myopia. But tried to get by despite all the obstacles in their paths, and the stories they left behind remind us that they existed, and that their lives mattered.And this is an affront to the sensibilities of Weimer, Merz, and all those who have sold their souls to the oligarchs or even joined their ranks. For all their talk about preserving German or European culture, they hold any culture that they don’t control in utter contempt. They favor fascist aesthetics over anything created, shared and enjoyed by a large number of non-rich people.As a German patriot, this stance offends me deeply. But we don’t have to buy the stories they are telling. We don’t have to submit to the Mighty Whities and permit them to define what “culture” is and is not. We can tell our own tales, whether old or new. We can create our own customs and traditions, with each generation adding their own threads – no matter where their ancestors came from.Culture is what we make of it. #BrothersGrimm #culture #EpsteinClass #folklore #Germany #Merz #Weimer #WhiteSupremacy
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    Lstn2urmama  🇨🇦L
    @wordstitcher I must also mention that many can be from immigrants who could not getaway with things where they came from but can impose themselves upon every other in a unknown place and do take advantage of systems meant to help those without but have come with hidden money to be show up with sudden expensive vechiles or many of them all at once as well as clothing thinking others know not which is what .. replace landlords flooring from lino to hardwood flooring ..things that are a show of money ... we can see the changes made ...short time of move in...
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    Smithsonian RouletteS
    title: Frederick Douglassartist: George Kendall Warren, 1834 - 29 Nov 1884source: National Portrait Gallery#Art #Design #Museum #Gallery #MastodonArt #MastoArt #Culture #Randomhttps://npg.si.edu/object/npg_NPG.80.242
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    Windy cityP
    Sometime around the 2020 era, we lost the right to be mediocre at things we love. No longer can you just bake bread...you must start a sourdough side hustle lol. Wanna stay fit and go jogging or running? Nah, you gotta optimize your biometrics for a marathon. What my point is that every hobby has been enshittified and gentrified into a brand opportunity.This strange infatuation with optimization culture is killing the human spirit.So this new year, starting tomorrow, one of my resolutions is to do something bad but fun. Maybe I write a terrible poem. I like to draw and paint, so perhaps I will draw a horse that looks like a table or sing off-key in the showers or in front of my loved ones. The algorithm driving the mainstream social media wants me to be a polished product, but my humanity lives in these messy, unoptimized, cringe-inducing joyful failures.I will try to reclaim the right to be an amateur. Will you join me?#creativity #hobbies #art #depression #socialmedia #newyear #resolution #happynewyear #MentalHealth #Culture #enshittification #creative #design #writing #reading #books #drawing #music #gardening #nature #running #fitness
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    JĂĽrgen HubertJ
    @guyjantic Folklore has always been weird.And Capitalist exploitation is not new, either. I mean, _someone_ made a bunch of money with the Magical Treasure Hunt craze of Early Modern Europe, and it probably wasn't the actual treasure hunters.
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    Smithsonian RouletteS
    title: Ver (Spring)source: Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museumnotes: Research in Progress#Art #Design #Museum #Gallery #MastodonArt #MastoArt #Culture #Randomhttps://collection.cooperhewitt.org/view/objects/asitem/id/6248
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    Flipboard Culture DeskC
    Sports betting has exploded across America, with a vast majority of states legalizing gambling in recent years. In fact, Americans gambled $150 billion through online sportsbooks last year. Far too many lost nearly everything. @RollingStone reports on the near-fatal consequences for a group of young men with a phone, app, and a growing addition:https://flip.it/aOcXA6#Culture #Gambling #Betting #SportsBetting #Sports #USA
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    FylgjaF
    Okay so I feel like mastodon.social is a little too general for me. I feel like I want more of a safe space for #neurodivergent folks, and folks who want to #decolonize their minds. Genuine #BIPOC allies. #culture enthusiasts. #history geeks. Like #nature and #geology. #witchy but the ancestral folk wisdom, grandma kind. ...too general still? But too specific for general.
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    The Community EditionC
    FASHION, OR, THEFT AND MOCKERYSouth Asians have long been the target of racism and mockery for simply expressing their culture. We’ve been called names for oiling our hair, wearing a dupatta, eating with our hands, adorning with a bindi and most importantly, for simply having brown skin.  But now, the very West that once shunned these practices is eagerly stealing them, repackaging our culture as the latest trend. They are attempting to colonize South Asian culture this time not through land or power, but through fashion.   The problem is that while people love to eat Indian food and wear South Asian clothes, they rarely appreciate or respect the people who created them.  Our cultural staples have been rebranded and resold without context or credit. Dupattas are now “Scandinavian scarves”; oiled hair that was once mocked as “greasy” is now a “Slick Back” style; Chudiyan are suddenly “BuDha bangles”; the traditional Salwar is sold as “Balloon pants”; the Lungi becomes a “check mini skirt” at Zara; Kolhapuri chappals are now “leather toe-ring sandals” at Prada; mehendi is renamed “henna tattoos”—stripped of its ritual meaning; and Lehengas are marketed as two-piece designer sets.  This isn’t appreciation, this is cultural appropriation wrapped in expensive branding.  What’s happening is a slow, subtle re-colonization of South Asian culture. The West isn’t just borrowing our traditions, it’s seizing them, profiting from them, and erasing us in the process.  What’s worse is the double standard: when brown kids wear their culture, they’re “too ethnic,” “weird,” or “embarrassing.” But when someone from outside the community wears the same thing, it’s “edgy,” “bold,” or “fashion-forward.”  This hypocrisy isn’t harmless. It reveals the deep racism that still exists, racism that is accepted or ignored far too often when it’s aimed at South Asians.  What may be a seasonal trend for a fashion label is, for us, a legacy. These cultural elements have been passed down from generation to generation, rich with meaning, tradition, and memory. They are our identity. They tell stories of migration, trade, ritual, and resistance.  It is infuriating to see them taken out of context, renamed and sold back to us at exorbitant not only because of the theft, but also because South Asian voices and lives are still being erased.  This frustration stems from decades, even centuries, of cultural dismissal. Our anger comes from the racism that still affects South Asians globally. Our cultures have been viewed as “embarrassing” when worn by us but becomes “iconic” when worn by someone else.  This is more than just fashion. It’s about power, privilege and prejudice.  When South Asian cultures are only respected when it’s separated from South Asian people, that’s not appreciation. That’s exploitation.  Because South Asian cultures are not a gimmick. It’s not a costume. They are not a trend.  It’s history. It’s pride. It’s survival. And it deserves your respect.  True appreciation begins with acknowledgement, respect and inclusion not with profit, trend-chasing or aesthetic repackaging.   South Asian cultures are not costume or accessory. It is history, identity and resilience and it deserves to be treated that way.  For South Asians, cultures are not just tradition.  It is identity.  It is ancestry.  It is survival.  This article is cross published with The Cord. #ancestry #anger #checkMiniSkirt #chudiyan #culturalStaples #Culture #diasporaFashion #dupatta #fashion #hennaTattoos #identity #kohlapuriChappals #leatherToeRingSandals #mehendi #Migration #mockery #Oil #prada #resistance #ritual #scandinavianScarves #slickBack #SouthAsian #southAsianDiaspora #survival #theft #trade #Zara