ANSWER
“Lost futures” refers to the idea that certain visions of progress, utopia, or alternative ways of living—once imagined as possible—have been abandoned or rendered unattainable, often due to the dominance of capitalist realism. These futures are “lost” because they no longer seem viable or even imaginable within the current ideological framework. Mark Fisher, for instance, highlights how the 20th century’s optimistic visions of technological and social progress have been replaced by a sense of stagnation and resignation. The concept reflects a haunting by what could have been, leaving a cultural and political void filled by nostalgia or a repetitive recycling of the past.