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23 May 2009 07:43 pm
Hipster History
by Richard Florida
Brian Frank writes:
Well, almost. Norman Mailer's infamous
"The White
Negro: Superficial Reflections on the Hipster" was originally published in 1957 in
Dissent.
Nearly a decade earlier, in 1948, Anatole Broyard, published
"A Portrait of the Hipster" in Partisan Review. I can't find an online version, but here's how one writer describes it:
Broyard attempted an analysis and a
definition of a new type then appearing around Greenwich Village who had, in his
view, been welcomed by intellectuals who "ransacking everything for meaning,
admiring insurgence... .attributed every heroism to the hipster.,,."
But Broyard
was less enthusiastic about these supposed new rebels ... In Broyard's words: "The hipster promptly
became in his own eyes, a poet, a seer, a hero." And he added that the hipster
life-style "grew more rigid than the Institutions it had set out to defy. It
became a boring routine. The hipster - once an unregenerate Individualist, an
underground poet, a guerrilla - had become a pretentious poet laureate."
Of course,
what Broyard was doing, as well as attacking the hipsters, was criticising his
fellow-intellectuals for failing to accept that the hipster rebellion was a
sham.
Hmmmmmm ...
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