It is sometimes tacitly assumed that artists and fiction writers and musicians have some kind of influence over the political zeitgeist. It seems to me that they merely react to it and comment upon it -- the roots of any changes lie elsewhere.
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Some art does e.g. Picasso's Guernica.
I'm fairly certain no Communist painted that.
There is such thing as Communist art -- see socialist realism -- but it is doubtful whether its existence ever made any political difference. But at least it left a legacy in the stations of the Moscow Metro, probably the prettiest subway system in the world.
That subway probably has human bones mixed in with the concrete.
More art to make Peck smile:
https://i.imgur.com/TGtAw8ol.jpg
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To a certain extent I think it's rather obvious.
This is why propaganda comes in such artistic forms as posters, movies, song and dance, food even.
Politics is downstream of culture.
But, again, how did the existence of this sort of thing actually make any political difference?
There was a lot of anti-Vietnam-War art in the 1960s and '70s -- but the government did not end the war until it was damned good and ready to end it, for its own reasons.
It had an entire population of enslaved people marching happily arm in arm into the sunsets of 69 years of failure and death.
Absolutely it does. CS Lewis illustrated this brilliantly in "That Hideous Strength."
That story certainly had no effect on politics.
Watching Fauci and the CDC these days, I'm reminded constantly of the machinations of NICE.
That means you are an idiot. It does not mean anything else.
Uh-huh. Every day shows Lewis was a prophet in that series.
Was the art strictly necessary to that purpose?
Was the art strictly necessary to that purpose?
That story certainly had no effect on politics.
It was propaganda and brainwash a little less sophisticated than what the DNC employs against Americans today.
Haven't seen much art of any kind come out of the DNC, apart from the campaign posters and such both parties use.
Politics effects art and culture.
Obviously. But, does it work the other way?