- Parachronism
A parachronism (from the Greek "παρά"," "on the side," and "χρόνος"," "time") is anything that appears in a temporal context in which, though not sufficiently out of place as to be impossible, is not normally found in that time period. The item is often an object, but may be a verbal expression, a technology, a philosophical idea, a musical style, a material, a custom, or anything else closely enough bound to a particular period as to seem strange when viewed in a later time period.
Parachronisms are usually seen as objects or ideas which were once common, but are now considered rare or inappropriate. They often take the form of obsolete technology or outdated fashion. This is different from an
anachronism , in which the object or idea in question had not yet been invented when the situation takes place, and is therefore impossible to have existed at that time. Thus a suburban housewife in the United States around 1960 would not ordinarily use awashboard for laundry afterwashing machine s became the norm, and few teenagers of that time would be listening toragtime music.The time in which a practice would be a parachronism could be temporary; the music of
Johann Sebastian Bach went into nearly-complete oblivion during the late 18th Century and would not likely be performed in public until it was revived in the middle of the 19th Century. It would not be a parachronism in the late 20th Century, when millions deliberately listened to music associated with earlier times. Likewise, one would hardly expect a college professor inNazi Germany to extol the liberal ideas ofThomas Jefferson or the socialist ideals ofKarl Marx and avoid unpleasant consequences, although such expression would be permissible in either theWeimar Republic before 1933 or theFederal Republic of Germany after 1949.ee also
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Anachronism
*Anatopism
*Nonlinear (arts)
*Parachrony
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