• @jordanlund@lemmy.world
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    251 month ago

    Gets really weird when you start talking about comic book eras.

    Golden Age - 1938 to 1956 (18 years)
    Silver Age - 1956 to 1970 (14 years)
    Bronze Age - 1970 to 1985 (15 years)

    Here’s where it gets fun:

    Modern Age - 1985 to Present (40 years)

    • @fireweed@lemmy.world
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      81 month ago

      I always feel like a total dweeb using “contemporary,” but my desire for accuracy wins out every time.

  • @thesohoriots@lemmy.world
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    81 month ago

    Those aren’t the only two terms in contention, unfortunately, because academics love a pissing contest. Middle fingers to the term I personally hate, “cosmodernism.”

  • @Donkter@lemmy.world
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    51 month ago

    Modern is defined as the current year of whatever writer coined the term. So after writing about the “modern” day for a century…

    • @yesman@lemmy.world
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      21 month ago

      This was supposed to be a synthases of modern and post-modern, but it seems to me they took the worst parts of modernism and the straw-person caricature of the postmodern and mixed them in a blender.

  • Cid Vicious
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    31 month ago

    Especially when the periods defined by these terms are often different time frames depending on the field.

  • @floo@retrolemmy.com
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    1 month ago

    The word “modern “means different things in different contexts. This comic is making a joke about mixing them.

    For example, in the context of Art History, both of the terms Modern and Modernism are typically capitalized to make the distinction between the colloquial form.