Hipster (1940s subculture)
A hipster is a person who is strongly associated with a subculture that has been deemed "hip", or "hep". The term was used originally in the 1940s and 1950s to describe aficionados of jazz, and it eventually described many members of the Beat Generation, but its usage declined in the 1960s, with the advent of hippies. Since the mid 1990s, the word "hipster" has been redefined to refer to members of a different subculture. Modern hipsters are those devoted to ironic retro fashions, indie music and film, alternative comics, and other forms of expression outside the mainstream. Robert Lanham's The Hipster Handbook catalogues the hipster in its current incarnation.
Original hipsters
In the purest sense, the original hipsters were the hip, mostly black performers of jazz and swing music in the 1940s and 1950s, at a time when "hip" music was equated with African-American-originated forms of musical expression.
Although hipsters could be black or white, the term later and more predominantly came to be used to refer to whites who were aficionados of the music, groupies and members of the so-called Bohemian set, or Beat Generation. Because the jazz scene had long been integrated, hipster culture, too, became integrated before much of the rest of society. The use of the term "hipster" for whites who had an affinity for the avant-garde and for African-American culture was popularized in Norman Mailer's 1956 book The White Negro: Superficial Reflections on the Hipster. Hipsters sometimes were referred to as beatniks, a combination of "beat" and "nik," a Yiddish suffix meaning "person."
Hipsters were cool. That is, they exhibited a mellow, laid-back attitude that is still called hip. Many also were users and popularizers of recreational drugs, particularly marijuana, amphetamines, and to some extent heroin, which was popular for a time among bebop scene leaders like Charlie Parker and Miles Davis.
Hipster lingo
Many terms in the hipster argot, such as hip, kicks, square and dig continue to be used in their hipster meanings, though often with a certain level of self-conscious irony attached. Cool has entered the everyday speech of many English speakers, and become so common, it is rarely thought of as a word associated with a particular hipster aesthetic.
An even earlier term for hipster was gate, used because gates swing. Gate, Jim, and Jackson were used in place of regular names in expressions like "Hold on, Jim" and "Solid, Jackson." Hipsters were also known as hepcats, "hep" being an earlier form of the word "hip". Cat/Kat was used to mean "person"; so a hip kat, or hepcat, is a person who is current and up-to-date. However, "Hippie" was a "Beatnik term"; meaning "Not Hip Enough to be Hip" or "Not hip enough to be a real Beatnik".
When Beatnik language was the fad, the quintessential New York hipster, or bohemian, wore a beret, dressed frequently in black, smoked mentholated Kool cigarettes, wore sunglasses even after sundown, and frequented jazz clubs and beat poetry coffeehouses and cafés in the Village. Many hipster terms generally fell out of use in mainstream, white society with the changing of styles and the coming of hippies in the 1960s, but have remained in use in the African-American community, where they were neither in nor out of fashion, but simply part of the traditional lexicon.
While attempts have been made to link the etymologies of hip, cat and dig with Wolof, a West African language, this remains a subject of debate among linguists, and is not widely accepted [1] [2].
Hipsters come lately
Since the late 1990s, the word hipster has resurfaced as a term to describe performers and devotees of indie rock, intelligent dance music and related styles of music, and those who follow the associated fashions and tastes. Accessories of the modern hipster include Vespa scooters; Buddy Holly-style glasses; and vintage clothing, with patches and buttons bearing ironic messages.
Modern hipsters often follow or are involved with the local art and DJ scenes, and are often associated with independent film and alternative comics. Unlike previous generations of hipsters, they are rarely now associated with the jazz scene, though the term may have re-entered use as a result of the swing revival of the mid-1990s, which many current hipsters were associated with at the time.
A satirical book was published showing the many different kinds of hipsters in a comical way called The Hipster Handbook.
Hipster districts
Due to financial circumstances hipsters have often been forced to live in formerly unfashionable, often blighted neighborhoods in large cities; after wealthier middle-aged people (many of whom are former hipsters themselves) move into these areas and begin to gentrify them, hipsters often move on. As of this writing (October 2004), noted hipsters live in every major city in the world and their favorite districts in the United States include Williamsburg, Red Hook, Lower East Side, and East Village in New York, Southwest Baltimore and Fell's Point in Baltimore, Davis Square in Somerville, near Boston, Houston Heights and Montrose in Houston, Wicker Park in Chicago, Baxter Avenue in Louisville, Mt. Pleasant and Adams-Morgan, in Washington, DC, Olde City and Northern Liberties in Philadelphia, they congregate on the west coast in Mission District and the Lower Haight neighborhood of San Francisco and many parts of Los Angeles including Echo Park, Silver Lake, and Eagle Rock and of course in the beach areas of Southern and Northern California and parts of Mexico.
In the UK, the popular hipster places of dwelling include Hoxton in the Old East End of London who became the legendary Shoreditch Twats, satirised by Chris Morris in Nathan Barley, as well as the adjacent Bethnal Green. New Cross, around the Goldsmiths College area (also in London) is popular with hipsters, especially the local art-punk scene.
Canadian hipsters tend to congregate in The Plateau in Montreal, the College Street neighbourhood in Toronto, around Chinguacousy Park in Brampton, and the mid-Main and Commercial Drive neighbourhoods in Vancouver.
Noted hipster districts in Australia include Fitzroy/Fitzroy North and Brunswick in Melbourne, Newtown and Darlinghurst in Sydney and Fortitude Valley in Brisbane.
In Germany, they tend to swing in Prenzlauer Berg, a district of Berlin, and the Schanzenviertel, a district of Hamburg. And of course many parts of France, Italy, Greece and Spain.
Famous hipsters
1940s and 1950s
For a comprehensive look at the Beat Generation of hipsters, see Beat Generation
- Steve Allen, comedian, jazz musician and songwriter, friend and sometime employer of Lenny Bruce as well as colabortor of Allen Ginsberg and Jack Kerouac.
- Mose Allison, singer, pianist, songwriter
- Lenny Bruce, comedian
- Lord Buckley, monologist, "The Bad Rapping of the Marquis de Sade"
- Neal Cassady, friend and lover of Allen Ginsberg, beat poet and driver of Ken Kesey's bus Furthur on what was know as "The electric kool-aid acid test"
- Al Jazzbo Collins, disc jockey, broadcasting from the Purple Grotto, hip lexicographer
- Miles Davis, jazz musician and pioneer of Bop, fusion and free jazz, recorded "Kind of Blue" and "Birth of the Cool"
- Sammy Davis, Jr., singer, actor, and civil rights activist
- Billy Eckstine, singer and bandleader
- Ella Fitzgerald, singer
- Slim Gaillard, musician, "The Groove Juice Special" and "Cement Mixer Puti Puti"
- Harry 'the Hipster' Gibson, pianist, singer of "Who put the benzedrine in Mrs. Murphy's Ovaltine?
- Allen Ginsberg, Beat poet, friend and contemporary of Kerouac, who served as the face of both the Beats and later the early Hippies
- Henry Jacobs, whose persona was Shorty Petterstein
- Danny Kaye, comedian, singer, and actor who protested the Communist trials of the McCarthy Era.
- Gene Kelly, dancer, comedian, film director, moved to Paris to enjoy the Bohemian artistic freedom and refused to testify durring the Communist Black listing of the McCarthy Era.
- Jack Kerouac, Beat poet and author of On the Road and The Dharma Bums, which launched the "rucksack revolution" and brought the Bohemian atmosphere of San Francisco to the rest of America.
- Mezz Mezzrow, jazz musician
- Ken Nordine, actor and creator of "word jazz"
- Frank Sinatra, singer, actor, producer and civil rights activist.
- Terry Southern, author of "Blood of the Wig", a hipster classic about getting high using a serum derived from the blood of a schizophrenic.
- Mel Torme, singer, actor and jazz musician
- Ethel Waters, singer, religious worker, actress and civil rights activist
1990 and beyond
- Jessica Abel, comic book writer & artist
- Mike Allred, comic book writer & artist
- Paul Thomas Anderson, writer/director of Magnolia, Punch-Drunk Love and other films
- Wes Anderson, writer/director of Rushmore, The Royal Tenenbaums and other films
- Gregg Araki, filmmaker
- Badly Drawn Boy, musician
- Beck, musician known for repurposing music of the past
- Zach Braff, actor & filmmaker
- David Eggers, author of A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius and editor of McSweeney's
- Ben Folds, musician
- Vincent Gallo, multitalented director of Buffalo 66
- Janeane Garofalo, comedienne & actress
- Lukas Haas, actor; friends with Vincent Gallo
- Mitch Hedberg, comedian
- Spike Jonze, filmmaker & music video director
- Miranda July, performance artist, filmmaker
- Ira Kaplan, musician (Yo La Tengo)
- Pagan Kennedy, 'zine editor
- Chuck Klosterman, author
- Richard Linklater, director of Slacker and other films
- Jim Mahfood, comic book creator
- Stuart Murdoch, musician (Belle & Sebastian)
- Conor Oberst, musician
- Chuck Palahniuk, author of Fight Club, Choke, and other novels
- Paul Pope, comic book creator
- Christina Ricci, actor, appeared in many independent films like The Opposite of Sex
- Winona Ryder, actor
- Bex Schwartz, musician, comiedienne, performance artist, blogger
- Seth, comic book creator
- Chloë Sevigny, actor
- Elliott Smith, musician
- Kevin Smith, filmmaker & comic book writer
- Quentin Tarantino, director of Pulp Fiction and other stylish independent films
- Adrian Tomine, comic book author
Quotations
- "Carrying his language and his new philosophy like concealed weapons, the hipster set out to conquer the world." -- Partisan Review, 1948
- "The hipster is man who's in the know, grasps everything, is alert." -- Mezz Mezzrow, Really the Blues
External links
- Hipsters, flipsters, and finger-poppin daddies, the original scene
- The Hipster Handbook, the modern manifestation
- www.freewilliamsburg.com guide to 21st century New York City hipsters
- What Happens When a Generation Refuses to Grow Up Wes Anderson and the problem with hipsters
- Hipster Bingo Print this out and take it to the next show you go to
- How to speak hip, Comedy recording
- HipsterCards, free alternative ecards with attitude
- Generation Milchkaffee, Popular account of hipster life and attitude in Berlin and Hamburg (in German language)
- Crying Wolof: Does the word hip really hail from a West African language?
- The Straight Dope on the word "hip"
Hipster is also a fashion term from the early 1960s for trousers or a skirt that sits on the hips rather than the waist.