I've been reading a post on a LiveJournal community called "FogeyGoff" (hee hee) which is on a very intriguing theme, and I'd love to hear what BC Goths have to say about it, since the discussion so far has leaned towards eastern Canada. It's a long post with a lot of comments, but if you have time I recommend reading it all. The gist of it is what Goth once was, what it has become, and how people are having difficulties with a changing subculture. Since there's a wide age group on this forum I though this would be a great place to discuss our take on it.
Part of the post:
"Goth, back in the 80s, had a decadence, a hedonism to it that is missing today. The goth subculture embraced the darker side of life, we ENJOYED the balance of both life and death, we CELEBRATED our individuality together. There was a romance, a victorian feel to the scene. Sure, black tshirts [usually for a goth band] and jeans were the daytime 'uniform' but at night, we shone... Goths, in the 80s, mostly worked. The money was pretty good, and we spent it. It was the start of the community so there was a lot of DIY, and we did. We created. We built. We made.
Now... now Goth still rebels, but it's a loud dissonant voice. It expresses individuality through insistence, that you WILL play my music in a public venue or else I'll howl that you are restraining my individual rights. There is no respect, alienation has turned to xenophobia. The romance is gone... Goth then was making love and Goth now is just fucking...
Goth, who spurned the mainstream and raised the flag of individuality, has been bought. Movies and books, Hot Topic and cartoons... Reznor and Manson took Goth music into radio play and top40 club play, and then didn't follow up. And other bands looked at the open door and didn't step forward. Before them it was the Cure, Sisters of Mercy and Adam Ant... yes, Adam Ant. They all brought Goth closer to the 'mainstream' and no one followed up. Instead, we let mass media and current marketers do the job, cheapening the experience because we weren't in control.
And the 'kids'... the noobgoths, the new wearers of black don't have a sense of history. They don't see our roots, where we came from. They see what they're sold. This is part their fault for jumping in without looking for rocks at the bottom of the lake [but youth is oft that way] and partly our fault for not exposing them, introducing them, showing them. "