I was walking down some street in NYC today and passed a newsstand that posted an ad for TimeOut NY, the magazine. The magazine cover in the ad showed a cover story called something like "Kill the Hipsters." (I'm not sure it actually "kill them," but it was some similar anti-hipster headline.) I have not read this TimeOut story, so I may be missing the point.
I thought to myself, what is the source of all this anti-hipster rage? When and why did it become fashionable to rail against hipsters? It seems like a kind of backlash -- but is it backlash against people who have cool haircuts, wear white belts and "vintage" tshirts or, a couple of years ago, trucker hats? Or is hipster in this case a sensibility -- anything avant-garde and cool, including indie rock, indie movies and "hipster lit" (whatever that might be exactly), even expensive liberal arts colleges and cool urban "hipster" neighborhoods?
I'm not as hip as I used to be, I'm pushing 40, and I don't dress the part of a hipster for sure, and I don't think I ever have. Somehow, when I see hipster-bashing in the media, I still can't help feel like they're talking about people like me, and a sensibility I share with people who might take a certain pride in that label. I admit to reading through "The Hipster Handbook" a couple of years ago and getting a few good laughs out of it, but also feeling like that book was a tongue-in-cheek description of people like me in certain respects. And more than a few FOTs, for example. I won't name any names, however.
Is there a class element to this anti-hipster sentiment? An anti-intellectual quality to it? Or neither of these at all? At some point, it became a label that one might not want to be stuck with, and I'm wondering exactly why that happened.
Somehow, this phenomenon reminds me of the time about 27 years ago that there was a kind of backlash against disco. It was a swift but unmistakable development that in retrospect seems to have been led by white male rock-and-rollers who saw something in the enormous popularity of disco at the time that they just couldn't stand, e.g. the "disco demolition" rallies at Comiskey Park in Chicago. This analogy might be reaching a bit, but I remember it well, and I was only in grade school then.
I'm really curious if anyone on the board has similar thoughts, or feels that I'm all wrong about this.