Mark Fisher Slow Cancellation Of The Future -

Mark Fisher Slow Cancellation Of The Future -

In 2014, the British writer and cultural theorist Mark Fisher coined a phrase that has only grown more resonant with each passing year:

Look back at the 20th century. The 1960s had the space race, psychedelic utopias, and radical civil rights dreams. The 1970s had punk’s "No Future" (which was, paradoxically, a future-oriented rebellion). The 1980s had cyberpunk and neon-lit dystopias. Each decade had a distinct sonic and visual signature.

In the post-Cold War 1990s, Francis Fukuyama declared "The End of History." Fisher translated this for culture: if history is over, so is genuine novelty. All that remains is to endlessly reprocess the archive. mark fisher slow cancellation of the future

“It is easier to imagine the end of the world than the end of capitalism.” – Frederic Jameson (via Mark Fisher)

Fisher observed that from the 1990s onward, cultural production entered a loop. Instead of new aesthetics, we got revivals. Instead of new genres, we got reboots, sequels, and "nostalgia modes." A teenager in 2025 listens to music that sounds like 1985, watches a movie franchise from 2002, and plays a video game remastered from 1998. Their cultural present is a haunted house of pasts that were never properly buried. The Two Symptoms Fisher identified two key symptoms of this cancellation: In 2014, the British writer and cultural theorist

If you feel a vague melancholy, a sense that time is moving but nothing is changing—that is the slow cancellation.

And naming it is the first step to turning the volume back up. Further reading: Capitalist Realism (2009) and Ghosts of My Life (2014) by Mark Fisher. The 1980s had cyberpunk and neon-lit dystopias

The internet, once a utopian frontier of possibility, became a vast storage unit. Streaming services didn't create new genres; they created algorithmic playlists of the old. Social media didn't birth new art forms; it accelerated the recycling of memes. If Fisher were alive today (he tragically died in 2017), he would note that the COVID-19 pandemic was a moment of "future shock" in reverse. For a brief window in 2020, the future did arrive—empty streets, remote everything, a pause button on normalcy. But what did we do? We desperately tried to restore the old normal. We chose repetition over reinvention. Is there a way out? Fisher was not a doomer. He was a diagnostician. The slow cancellation is not a law of physics; it is a psychological and political condition.