So there were a lot of excellent comments on the first edition of this post (both the
LJ version and the
DW version) but then they made me think about what I left out, so here's some (
more stuff that would surprise Captain America when he got woken up after 70 years frozen in ice: )
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I think he might be disappointed how far we hadn't got with space travel. In the fifties they still thought that by 1980 we'd have colonies on Mars. He'd probably expect luxury hotels on the Moon by 2012.
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Also, I just wrote that Steve still takes his coffee black with two sugars, due to a well-founded suspicion of iceboxes--one thing I haven't seen discussed much is Steve's growing up during the Depression.
*What with Harry Potter, there seems to be a degree of nasal anxiety going on, as well as the whole Travis, Xander, Blake, Nick Fury eye-threat thing.
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Good catch on the icebox. I wonder when sugar started coming in packets instead of in cubes?
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I mean, there would be places with packets of sugar, but anyplace Steve would go, right after the waitress finished marrying the ketchup bottles she'd fill up the sugar shakers.
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( ... )
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The other day I was reading a Mexican movie industry newsletter from 1940, like you do, which reported on a meeting among producers and distributors to discuss the looming threat of broadcast television to their industry. The first TV signal was actually broadcast in Mexico in 1954, and until 1968 there were large parts of the country where no signal was available.
The larger truth here is that everything happens earlier than you expect, and nothing ever happens all at once, and nothing ever goes away completely.
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Which is still of course partly a function of class. Because pre-serum Steve may have imagined flying cars in the future when he visited the Stark expo, but I'm not convinced that he imagined himself owning one. So on the one hand there is the technologies of computers and the infrastructure of the internet, but on the other there is the idea that a scrawny orphan from a working class background can have access to all the libraries in the world. And I do think that's a genuine surprise. That's the surprise my working class 8 year old self couldn't have imagined in an 80s where cell phones existed, sure, but only for the very very rich, and never in my wildest imagination for me.
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