Hipster (1940s subculture)
A hipster is a person who derives their identity largely through their association with a subculture which has been deemed "hip," a word taken from African American Vernacular English (AAVE). Hip means "fashionably current," and likely came from the Wolof word hipi, meaning "to open one's eyes," or "to be aware."
Original hipsters
The original hipsters were performers and devotees of jazz and swing music in the 1940s and 1950s, and members of the so-called Bohemian set, or Beat Generation. They sometimes were referred to as beatniks. 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 and amphetamines, but also heroin, which was big among bebop scene leaders like Charlie Parker and Miles Davis.
The hipster culture became racially integrated before much of the society around it. Hipsters could be black or white at a time when "hip" music was equated with primarily African-American-originated forms of musical expression. (Some would trace this cultural mixing all the way back to blackface performers of the late 19th and early 20th centuries.) The application of the term to whites who were integrated into black culture was popularized in Norman Mailer's 1956 book "The White Negro: Superficial Reflections on the Hipster".
Hipster lingo
Many terms in the hipster argot, such as hip, kicks, square, dig and cool continue to be used in their hipster meanings. Dig likely also has African origins, in degg, another Wolof term meaning "to hear," "to find out," or "to understand" (although another, less plausible theory, is that it is a derivation of the Irish tuigim, "I understand"). 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, again from Wolof. Kat is a suffix meaning "person"; so a hepkat, or hep cat, is a person who is current and up-to-date.
When this language was the fad, the quintessential New York hipster, or Bohemian, wore a beret, dressed completely in black, smoked mentholated Kool cigarettes, wore sunglasses even after sundown, and frequented jazz clubs and beat poetry cafes 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.
Hipsters come lately
Since the late 1990s, the word hipster has been re-adopted into usage to describe performers and devotees of indie rock, emo 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 clothing, patches and buttons bearing ironic messages.
Hipsters often 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 hipster districts include Williamsburg and Greenwich Village in New York, Wicker Park in Chicago, and Park La Brea and Silver Lake in Los Angeles.
Famous hipsters
1940s and 1950s
- Harry the Hipster Gibson, pianist, singer of "Who put the benzedrine in Mrs. Murphy's Ovaltine?
- Lord Buckley, monologist, "The Bad Rapping of the Marquis de Sade"
- Billy Eckstine, singer and bandleader
- Slim Gaillard, musician, "The Groove Juice Special" and "Cement Mixer Puti Puti"
- Al Jazzbo Collins, disc jockey, broadcasting from the Purple Grotto, hip lexicographer
- Mezz Mezzrow, jazz musician
- Lenny Bruce, comedian
- Mose Allison, singer, pianist, songwriter
- Ken Nordine, creator of "word jazz"
- Henry Jacobs, whose persona was Shorty Petterstein
- Terry Southern, author of "Blood of the Wig", a hipster classic about getting high using a serum derived from the blood of a schizophrenic.
1990 and beyond
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
- hipster bingo Print this out and take it to the next show you go to
Hipster is also a fashion term from the early 1960s for trousers or a skirt that sits on the hips rather than the waist.