Wednesday, March 11, 2020

Appartement: A New Word For Our Times

appartement.
noun: a real or imagined psychological discomfort caused by the expectation or anticipation of future political or socio-political events.  The term originated with specific reference to November 2010 elections but may also relate to future events (see further below under Extended Meanings).

Etymology
Appartement derives from the French word for apartment, and is preferably given a French pronunciation. The cognate English word apartment conveys the notion of "a set of private rooms in a building entirely of these".  The new word is derived from an older notion of separateness which ultimately manifests as solitary living. A paradox of appartement philosophy is an anti-communal spirit (preferring to abide alone) and this feature distinguishes adherents of appartement philosophy from earlier anti-establishment movements, for example, the hippies.

Extended Meanings
(1) Appartement philosophy began in the early 21st century as an earnest rebellion against what adherents viewed as increasingly materialist, amoral trends within United States social culture. Initially identified with a politically left-leaning philosophy, the appartement movement championed greener living, despite the need for more and more additional single person dwellings.  Appartement philosophy championed cultural diversity, indeed to the point of regarding everything and everybody as equal (but separate).  Adherents of appartement, notably white, young and affluent, actively despised cohabitation with opposite and even same sexed partners, especially if children instead of pets were involved, preferring the solitary "apart" lifestyle.

(2)  Appartement describes the existential angst of living alone in a big city surrounded by relative well being, yet having the feeling that that relative well being may unexpectedly vanish.  As a societal phenomenon, appartement sentiment first emerged as embodying independence and upward financial mobility, particularly amongst youths reaching or exceeding college age.  Appartement philosophy was best exemplified in the halcyon days of condominium speculation in the first decade of the 21st century.

(3) Appartement sentiment describes the feeling of willful detachment that adherents may feel when contemplating great swaths of fly-over-country where people live in actual family-based units which they consider archaic.

After the November 2010 elections, fictional and real portrayals in novels, films, and television began depicting appartement adherents with growing derision and scorn.  Adherents of appartement began to be seen as an isolated phenomenon.  Paradoxically, as world events incurred to unify the United States, the appartement movement smoothly blended into the fabric of greater American society.

[Addedappartement is exacerbated by modern social networking. To some degree, people "network" at the expense of forming older, more traditional social networks such as neighborhoods]
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I wrote that years ago on my blog here. You can check out the back and forth that blake I had at the time. Anyone remember blake?  I think I still have the power to summon him, but I won't at this time.

I dug this out for review because of very recent "social distancing" which certain universities are pushing. I'm predicting that "social distancing" will fail for very human reasons -- people are not geared to handle the existential angst of being alone. They will "safe cluster" instead.

16 comments:

edutcher said...

Appartement sounds a lot like paranoia.

The Dude said...

I used to live alone in my appartement. Now I am a recluse in my house.

That link goes back to a 2010 post - how cool is that?

chickelit said...

I will be 60 at the end of the month. I have never lived alone.

The Dude said...

Happy birthday, kid, I will be 70 later this year and I have lived alone since 1992, well, other than pets. I like pets.

deborah said...

Fab post, chick, a lot to chew on. Never put together apartment and living apart!

ndspinelli said...

Sixty is our normal Stranger in the Woods. That guy lived alone for 27 years in Maine.
Sixty 28 years just passed him.

chickelit said...

Has Sixty penned any manifestos?

The Dude said...

I have not, but did I ever tell you about one of my brothers? He so admired Ted Kaczynski's plush accommodations that he bought a similar shack in West-by-God-Virgina. Unlike ol' Teddy boy, my brother lived out his days in said shack.

deborah said...

So your brother was a proponent of the tiny house craze?

The Dude said...

LOL - yeah, that's him - ahead of his time!

Ted K is still alive at 77, my brother died at age 65. Maybe the grub is better in federal lockup, eh?

chickelit said...

Never put together apartment and living apart!

@deborah: Here's another one I just ran across. The word complement (not to be confused with compliment) is a grammatical term. A complement is a word that completes the verb in an English sentence; a complement is pure predicate. For example -- Sixty wrote a post about turning some wood. "A post" is the compliment because it completes the verb "wrote." I bring this up because I think we English speaking natives sometimes get confused about the the suffix "-ment."

Never put together apartment and living apart!

chickelit said...

I need to write a tongue-in-cheek post about "turning Sixty."

How's that one for multiple entendre?

The Dude said...

Interesting - I always think of the word "complement" in terms of math - you have one angle and if you add its complement and that makes the total 90 degrees.

That is relevant to my work in stave-built pieces - I have to be able to figure out the compound angles I need to cut in order to have all the sides in a laminated object total 360 degrees - otherwise it won't turn out round. I know, that's kind of a lathey pun right there, but I work the angles, you know.

deborah said...

"I bring this up because I think we English speaking natives sometimes get confused about the the suffix "-ment.""

Not sure what you ment there.

"turning Sixty...it's gold, Jerry, pure gold!

Sixty, that's what I call circular logic.

The Dude said...

And I have an extra and in my previous comment. No ifs ands and so on...

Trooper York said...

I have lived in apartments all of my life. City dwelling does not lend itself to buying a house. Plus apartments used to be reasonable. I had a lot of pull in Brooklyn so I got great apartments at a good price. Not so much anymore.

Congratulations on your upcoming birthday Chickie. I hope you many more years hanging out with me on the internet.