People react so emotionally to politics, I have decided to assess the decade just past by considering something less partisan but no less illuminating: culture.
Start with the music I have been listening to over the last few weeks. Every December I buy the albums that appear on the various "best of" lists. This year my pile of compact discs is mostly music recorded by women — Billie Eilish, Angel Olsen, Sharon Van Etten, Lana Del Rey, Taylor Swift, Jenny Lewis, FKA Twigs and others. This was much less the case 10 years ago.
That brings me to what I see as the No. 1. trend of the decade: the increasing influence of women.
Consider the 10 bestselling books of the decade. All have female protagonists, and the top seven are authored by women. ("Fifty Shades of Grey" and its sequels take the top three spots, with three others having the word "Girl" in the title.)
On television, last week my wife and I watched a few episodes of HBO's "The Watchmen" — the talk of many of our friends — and so far the main protagonist is a black woman. The last movie I saw was "The Rise of Skywalker," and the hero and savior is a woman.
I should point out that I very much like these albums, books and movies. I should also point out that I encountered all this culture without seeking out female protagonists or creators.
"The Rise of Skywalker," which is still likely to be one of the year's big movies, reflects some other cultural trends as well. Disney is still with us, stronger than ever, and the film is installment No. 9 in the "Star Wars" saga, which has a new TV spinoff, "The Mandalorian." The continuing prominence of these shows reflects a certain exhaustion of creativity in Hollywood.
Too many of the top movies these days are tent-pole franchises, pulled from comic books or graphic novels or TV shows. In contrast, "The Godfather" series stopped at three installments and I can't imagine Alfred Hitchcock would ever have done a ninth take on "Rear Window." But today the sequel and the franchise reign, reflecting how hard it is to grab public attention at a time when there never has been so much choice.