New Times,
New Thinking.

The lonely decade: how the 1990s shaped us – Audio Long Reads

Despite its optimism, the close of the 20th century brought dark warnings about the future – and many have come to pass.

By Gavin Jacobson and Adrian Bradley

On the eve of the millennium, JG Ballard noted how “everything is clean and shiny but oddly threatening”. The dawn of the 1990s had heralded a period of economic prosperity, of globalisation, relative peace and hi-tech connectivity – but did we end the decade more divided than ever?

In this deeply researched and wide-ranging essay, first published in March 2021, the New Statesman’s ideas editor, Gavin Jacobson, looks at the culture and politics of a misunderstood decade. After the old certainties of the Cold War, he writes, the West entered a period of drift: “The overwhelming sense was that the new world order bore no resemblance to those dreamlands promised by the… pursuit of freedom.” In place of the old tensions came the rise of reactionary populism, economic instability and the growth of corporate powers. Meanwhile technological and scientific advances – from an unregulated internet to the cloning of Dolly the sheep – brought uncertainty rather than enlightenment.

Drawing on sources from Naomi Klein to Don DeLillo, via Francis Fukuyama and The Matrix, Jacobson charts the decade that saw the birth of a global monoculture – as well as surveillance capitalism and today’s culture wars. Twenty years on, are the 1990s the decade we have failed to escape?

This article was first published on newstatesman.com and in the magazine on 24 March 2021. You can read a text version here.

Written by Gavin Jacobson and read by Adrian Bradley.

You also might enjoy listening to Travelling through Macron’s France, from the Channel to the Mediterranean by Jeremy Cliffe.

Podcast listeners can get a subscription to the New Statesman for just £1 per week, for 12 weeks. Visit www.newstatesman.com/podcastoffer

Give a gift subscription to the New Statesman this Christmas from just £49

How to listen to Audio Long Reads

1. In podcast apps

Audio Long Reads is available to listen on all major podcast players, including Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts, YouTube and more.

Either click the links above to open in your preferred player, or open the podcast app on your device and search for “Audio Long Reads”.

Follow or subscribe in your podcast app to receive new episodes as soon as they publish.

2. On the New Statesman website

The podcast is also available to listen right here on the New Statesman website. Bookmark https://www.newstatesman.com/podcasts/audio-long-reads, where we will publish new episodes every Saturday morning.

3. On your smart speaker

If you have an Amazon Echo, Google Home or Apple HomePod, ask it to “play the latest episode of Audio Long Reads from the New Statesman”.

The command will also work on other smart devices equipped with Alexa, Google Assistant or Siri.

Content from our partners
Building Britain’s water security
How to solve the teaching crisis
Pitching in to support grassroots football