Anyway, I've been thinking about it since I read it, both due to its beautiful language, but also for the truth of it, and what it implies to me about the path from 50 years ago to 50 or 500 years hence; it seems very true and something I have thought about constantly in my writing of fiction lately -- how do we create a world that has logically evolved out of our own? How do we plausibly make family structure, relationships, housing different? How do today's "alternative" (*snerk*) arrangements become the future's "norm"? While not an essay on world-building at all, it's been the thing that's most informed my world-building since I read it. And I wanted to rec it all to you, but I have to find it again first. Help!
ETA:
no subject
Date: 2009-04-01 05:51 pm (UTC)Did you not link to it from your own journal? If not, maybe it was one of our mutal friends?
(Gran says, "Get married, you'll get more Social Security." Cousin says, "I don't see why it matters." Sage says, "Cousin, Gran doesn't get SS cause Granpa was a farmer--she sees how much her friends get and she's wanting to protect you. Gran, Cousin doesn't even think there will BE SS by the time she'd get it. You're both right, it's a generation gap.")
no subject
Date: 2009-04-01 05:51 pm (UTC)