In 2022, even nostalgia is undergoing some changes. Post-Covid-19, the feeling has itself mutated, and new variants more adapted to this era are emerging
Newstalgia can transcend generations. (Credits: Roman Samborskyi / Shutterstock)
Newstalgia is the new nostalgia. A feeling that includes the desire to experience something familiar, but also something fresh. To make something new out of the old, to offer something totally new by interweaving old trends or formulas that are still relevant, with a modern touch, a contemporary look.
The Urban Dictionary defines newstalgia as "Something new that harks back to something old." The goal is not to idealize the past (in contrast to classic forms of nostalgia that can idealize certain moments of our history) or to pay homage to it, but to take advantage of it to create something new that will make sense in the here and now. Because after all, isn't borrowing from the past proof that the world is, paradoxically, constantly in search of something new?
We live in a world of constantly reinterpreted newness. The old never really returns as a replica of the past. It is recycled, reconfigured and proposed again. It is interrogated to give it a new meaning, new energy, and sometimes it even leads to a brand new trend.
In fashion, newstalgia is on display everywhere. Today's designers are constantly dipping into old collections to invoke the spirit of an era. But the new pieces created are never identical to the old ones. They have been adapted to the current era, with updated cuts and in different materials, for instance, more sustainable ones. Just look at how Gen Z has appropriated a decades-old staple of women's wardrobes — the skirt suit. Seen on the catwalks, this basic has also been adopted by several Gen Z icons (Dua Lipa, Camila Mendes, Emma Chamberlain, and Hailey Bieber Baldwin) who have given it a fresh vibe by reinterpreting it in their own way.