I'd like to post a few comments on Mark Greif's excellent essay, "What was the Hipster?" which was published in New York magazine and is part of a new book of the same name put out by the n+1 Foundation.
I.
Greif's essay has led me to reflect on some theories I've been cultivating, in the darkest recesses of my academic mind, over the last year. Sometime in the middle of 2009, I became convinced that literature -- and the support systems that give it life -- don't arise from a vacuum, though literary critics often treat it as if it does. This thought is, in a sense, quite elementary: writers and readers develop within specific institutional contexts -- educational, economic, and juridical, which are necessary for literature to flourish. My own sense of literary possibility, my own love of certain writers, arose within such institutions. As a correlary, I have become convinced that, though critics endlessly love to complain about it, the midcentury ascendence of middlebrow culture (and the authority of the literary novel in the United States) is intimately tied to the history of the middle class, which as a group has the resources, education, and leisure to produce and consume such literature. Though these institutions, and the forms of authority they have engendered, have often excluded and marginalized nonwhites, women, nonheterosexuals, among others, our goal should be to make our institutions more egalitarian, more inclusive, more reflective of our highest aspirations for freedom and creative life.
All of this isn't to say that the relationship between the middle class and literature is in any way simple or mechanical, nor do I mean to imply that only the middle class produces literary readers and writers -- such a claim would be absurd -- but I would claim that the rise of the middle class after World War II played a decisive, and in many ways positive, role in shaping contemporary reading publics and constructing an environment in which literary art could flourish on a historically unprecedented scale.
If these claims are true, then the gradual but persistent erosion of the middle class -- what many, including the economist Paul Krugman, have called the "new gilded age" -- foretells the coming of a "correction" -- perhaps massive, perhaps middling in scope -- within literary culture, a correction for the worse. This correction has been the story of American literature since the early 1970s: the destruction of the midlist, the rise of celebrity authors, the mania of the book auction, the quiet transformation of reading publics. Though magnificent literary work continues to be be written and published -- and we should have no doubt that great art will continue do be created -- the conditions under which art is produced and consumed are growing more constricted, leading many creative writers to take refuge in the University, if they're lucky. While many critics blame technology and mass media for declining mass interest in serious literature -- and some critics, such as Kathleen Fitzpatrick, make the claim that the discourse of the death of the novel arises from male white anxiety about the multicultural expansion of literary culture -- I think changes within our socioeconomic life since the early 1970s are a crucial and understudied part of the story.
II.
(1) It is in the context of these reflections that I think we must understand what the hipster is and what he (the hipster is almost invariably male) portends for the relationship between economic and cultural life. I should say from the outset that the sort of hipster Greif is talking about has only a glancing relationship to the midcentury hipster celebrated by Anatole Broyard, Allen Ginsberg, and Norman Mailer; there is much to say about this earlier incarnation of the hipster (in my dissertation, I wrote almost eighty pages on the midcentury hipster), but this figure bears little connection to what we mean today when we call someone a hipster.
Greif describes the contemporary hipster this way:
When we talk about the contemporary hipster, we’re talking about a subcultural figure who emerged by 1999, enjoyed a narrow but robust first phase until 2003, and then seemed about to dissipate into the primordial subcultural soup, only to undergo a reorganization and creeping spread from 2004 to the present.
The matrix from which the hipster emerged included the dimension of nineties youth culture, often called alternative or indie, that defined itself by its rejection of consumerism. Yet in an ethnography of Wicker Park, Chicago, in the nineties, the sociologist Richard Lloyd documented how what he called “neo-bohemia” unwittingly turned into something else: the seedbed for post-1999 hipsterism. Lloyd showed how a culture of aspiring artists who worked day jobs in bars and coffee shops could unintentionally provide a milieu for new, late-capitalist commerce in design, marketing, and web development. The neo-bohemian neighborhoods, near to the explosion of new wealth in city financial centers, became amusement districts for a new class of rich young people. The indie bohemians (denigrated as slackers) encountered the flannel-clad proto-businessmen and dot-com paper millionaires (denigrated as yuppies), and something unanticipated came of this friction
And, elaborating on the hipster's relationship to oppositional culture and the avant-garde, Greif concludes:
One could say, exaggerating only slightly, that the hipster moment did not produce artists, but tattoo artists, who gained an entire generation’s arms, sternums, napes, ankles, and lower backs as their canvas. It did not produce photographers, but snapshot and party photographers: Last Night’s Party, Terry Richardson, the Cobra Snake. It did not produce painters, but graphic designers. It did not yield a great literature, but it made good use of fonts. And hipsterism did not make an avant-garde; it made communities of early adopters.
Though well-observed and pleasantly cutting -- as a resident of San Francisco's Mission district, I can testify to the accuracy of this assessment -- Greif misses an opportunity to decisively define the new breed of hipster, let alone find adequate grounds for critiquing this figure, and he proceeds instead through the accretion of examples and the dropping of accurate hipster brand names (showing, of course, his own critical hipness). Greif gives us a hint of a truely critical definition of the hipster in his discussion of Richard Lloyd's terrific 2005 study, Neo-Bohemia: Art and Commerce in the Postindustrial City, but he misses what may be Lloyd's most startling point. The neo-bohemian enclaves of Wicker Park, Williamsburg, and the Mission are filled with aspiring artists and "creative-class" quasiprofessionals who accept disempowering, low-wage work in the creative service economy as a sign of distinction and liberation. These new hipsters are just waiting for their big break while waiting tables.
In my own work, which builds on Lloyd's study, I define the contemporary hipster as a type of person who is intensely focused on a process of self-making by means of strategic consumption. That is, the hipster constructs an identity by becoming something like a professional shopper, an "early adopter" of trends and fashions, as Greif rightly points out. What the hipster disavows is, quite specifically, an awareness of his class situation. What is the hipster's class situation? Fundamentally, I would argue, the hipster is a child of the middle class, typically college educated, who -- as Lloyd points out -- has abandoned the project of reproducing his class status in order to enter the perpetual carnival of the lifestyle service industry. College degree in hand, the hipster works in coffee shops, in bars, as a permanent intern, aspires to artistic greatness, and is enjoying his relative penury, which is convenient because during the "new gilded age" there simply aren't enough jobs to reproduce the hipster's class, even if he wanted to.
(2) This leads me to a second critique of Greif's argument. Perhaps inadvertently, "What was the hipster?" reproduces the authenticity-seeking imperative of hipness. In his important books, The Conquest of Cool and One Market Under God, Thomas Frank's point isn't that rebel consumers constitute a "fake" counterculture but rather that counterculture is, and has always been, completely harmonious with the ethic of consumption. Malcolm Cowley got it right when he diagnosed the bohemian lifestyle of Greenwich Village as, at root, a "consumption ethic," observing in 1934 that "self-expression and paganism encouraged a demand for all sorts of products -- modern furniture, beach pajamas, cosmetics, colored bathrooms with toilet paper to match," that "[l]iving for the moment meant buying an automobile, radio or house, using it now and paying for it tomorrow." The notion that hipsters ought, like "real" counterculturalists -- by Greif's account, "bike messengers, straight-edge skaters, Lesbian Avengers, freegans, enviro-anarchists, and interracial hip-hoppers who live as they please" -- raise "a spiritual middle finger" in the face of authority misses the salient point that (like Broyard's midcentury hipsters) the middle finger in question is only ever spiritual or symbolic. Is a middle-finger-waving Lesbian Avenger, who feel spiritually good, but has no political power, in any better situation than the ever vilified hipster?
(3) I would thus emphasize that what is missing from Greif's analysis of the new hipster is a robust notion of class as well as a critique of the way in which the imaginative life of the hipster is premised on certain kinds of obfuscations and short-term magical thinking. The hipster is a person who is convinced he is going to be a Great Artist -- even if his art is a form of lifestyle or brand management -- and he tells himself that he will keep working that bartending job another year, keep working as a barista until his band, his brand, his novel takes flight. There will, of course, come a time of reckoning -- what I have sometimes described to friends as a Great Sucking Sound -- as the college-educated aesthetes of the middle class find themselves unable to reproduce their class status. Some would-be hipsters will find salvation in grad school, some will make their way into elite law schools, and some will rediscover their inner management consultant, but not all of them will, not enough. After the reckoning to come, the pool of the middle class will have shrunk, and the children of hipsters will, when taken as a group, find themselves unable to reproduce the neo-bohemian folkways of their fathers and mothers. Unless, of course, the middle finger they raise ceases to be symbolic or spiritual.
III.
I write all of this not to counsel despair or cynicism. Quite the opposite. I think that the seeds of genuine opposition to authority -- of an art-loving coalition committed to unmaking the new gilded age -- might need to find grounds other than the symbolic or the spiritual. My premise is that by understanding our situation, we can work to change it. Am I wrong to think so?


Intriguing, Lee. I'm particularly interested in the Great Sucking Sound you identify. You're right: it's a decisive point on the life-trajectories of the "middle class" of our generation. It's the moment of reckoning at which those who were born to the middle class either make the jump into the middle class of which (debt-ridden and educated) they're only sort a part, or fail to do so. It is, we might say, an event. A cusp. It seems to me that the Great Sucking Sound is a critical feature of the present culture. I'd like to hear more about it.
Ross Perot, 1992, famously, on NAFTA:
"We have got to stop sending jobs overseas. To those of you in the audience who are business people, pretty simple: If you're paying $12, $13, $14 an hour for factory workers and you can move your factory South of the border, pay a dollar an hour for labor, hire young -- let's assume you've been in business for a long time and you've got a mature work force -- pay a dollar an hour for your labor, have no health care -- that's the most expensive single element in making a car -- have no environmental controls, no pollution controls and no retirement, and you don't care about anything but making money, there will be a giant sucking sound going south."
It is actually quite a brilliant performance and you can watch it here:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rkgx1C_S6ls
I'm pretty sure that is the provenance of Lee's phrase.
Yup.
I had forgotten that Ross Perot used the same phrase! How unfortunate, but I still like it as a description of the phenomenon of American downward mobility.
Although my sole passion in life is saying nasty things about n+1, which I odiate, I think even one more kindly disposed to Greif's productions might wonder about his essay, which (aside from proceeding mostly by declarations from the Delphic high chair) presupposes what it ought to demonstrate (namely that there was a thing that was the hipster between 1999 and now (or shortly before now), rather than a bunch of things (one might fairly have wondered, antecedently, whether there was anything that bound together the people captured by Last Night's Party, wierd woodsy beardos, and the sort of person who collects bootlegs of No Wave bands), comes to an understanding of the hipster as it defines it that doesn't exactly require eagle-like powers of discernment (basically, AFAICT, the hipster as a virtuoso of consumption crossed with the hipsters as hangers-on-gone-autonomous (unless these are just equivalent); this is precisely how people who denigrate hipsters already understand them), seems to believe that hipsters so defined constitute something new on this earth, and makes what points it can make—e.g. the much-quoted line about literature and fonts—primarily for the trivial reason that anyone who did do anything (even, unaccountably, if that "anything" is delivering packages on a bicycle) is, definitionally, not a hipster.
Your own definition of the hipster seems odd in a few ways, too; on the one hand I have to wonder how many people actually do think that they'll be a great artist when the art is their lifestyle (very few, I'd bet, no matter how appealing it is to think of them that that's their real art); on the other, taking shitty jobs with convenient schedules so as to be able to pursue other ends is not an innovative strategy and many who pursue it are far from having the conviction that recognition will surely come soon. (Take, to use an example from San Francisco's Mission District, the good people of the Jewelled Antler Collective. Not, I think, waiting for their big break—on the contrary, they've been quite industrious. And I sincerely doubt anyone involved expects anything like a big break to come their way at all. I admittedly don't know how the main people involved earn their money, but I would hardly be surprised to learn that, if they aren't self-sufficient, they don't have 9-5 middle-class jobs.) And, more relevantly, some people who take such positions and even have such convictions are not recognizably hipsters, and some who are recognizably hipsters don't have such positions at all. (Especially if one doesn't include being a grad student among menial, low-paying jobs—though arguably one should.)
I think that the seeds of genuine opposition to authority -- of an art-loving coalition committed to unmaking the new gilded age -- might need to find grounds other than the symbolic or the spiritual.
Surely this goes without saying—but why art-lovers in particular? I'd go with Yves Smith and Mike Konczal. (It may be that they are art lovers, but I don't mention them qua art lovers.) Zunguzungu, whatever his name really is, can come too.
Thanks for your response, Ben. Some thoughts:
(1) I think the excellence of Greif's essay resides in its observational style more than its analytical originality. Like you, I find the analysis somewhat wanting, often question-begging. Though who knows, I might have been infected by the teacherly imperative to conceal criticism in the sandwichbread of praise.
(2) My view of n+1 is blandly evenhanded. Some of what they produce is great, some of it not so much, much like The Believer, much like any magazine or journal that gropes toward seriousness.
(3) I could have been clearer in my definition of the hipster. I didn't mean to suggest that all aspiring artists are hipsters or that all hipsters are aspiring artists, at least as that term is traditionally understood. Based on my own ethnographic observations (i.e., living in the Mission) and Lloyd's book, I've provisionally defined the hipster as a kind if impresario of consumption, where consumption is something like an artform. The hipster, along with the entrepreneur, is one kind of "creative" operating in the cultural economy. The protagonist of Nick Hornby's High Fidelity is my model: someone who conflates self-making and Top-Five-List-making. None of this is new -- though the scale may be. Skinny-jean-wearing tattooed folk are just the latest subcultural ambassadors of this idea or dynamic.
(4) I should also say that even my own definition of the hipster is pretty suppositional, and may fall apart under too much scrutiny. To revise my original post, I should say I don't quite directly write about the new hipster, and certainly not in a sociological register. I am more interested in analyzing ethos and cultural models of character than in becoming an anthropologist. I have found it easier to write about figures I call "the believer" and "the coolhunter," which gets at what I'm trying to study without getting into the murky waters of contemporary hipsterology. Nonetheless, more ethnographic research is needed, and Lloyd has made a good start.
I must confess that until I'd read this post I really wasn't aware that "hipster" had been refitted for a New Era, and around skinny jeans at that. Now I know.
Just in time, too. For I've been following something called The Underbelly Project, which some of you may have heard about by now. It's a massive graffiti / street art exhibition mounted in an abandoned subway station in the Williamsburg section of Brooklyn, which is Hipster Central. It was mounted in secret over 18 months and is now even less accessible than it was then. For the curators have removed whatever stuff they'd use to facilitate access. But, now that word is out (courtesy of The New York Times and The Sunday Times and various bloggers) some folks have been sneaking down there and defacing the art. And some folks have gotten themselves arrested for sneaking down there.
If you read discussions here and there you'll find hipsters being critiqued for this and that, mostly for some variety of not being real. The critiques seem for the most part to come from partisans of graffiti. There's something of a war going on between graffiti folks and street art folks, though I sense that the hostility is mostly one way, graffiti to folk.
I've blogged a handfull of posts on Underbelly. I've not said much about this particular conflict, but you can see it in the comments I've quoted from the NYTimes in my second post (Underbelly 2).
http://blog.squeakywheelmedia.com/index.php/2010/02/mr-rogers-the-origin...
Hi Lee-
Perhaps it's in my position as a close observer of -- and one might say a participant in -- hipsterdom that I found this post (1) intriguing and (2) somewhat insulting (either accidentally or purposefully I'm not sure) and, by way of word substitution here and there, (3) a possible depiction of the life & fate of the contemporary academic.
Two quotes:
Number One // "The neo-bohemian enclaves of Wicker Park, Williamsburg, and the Mission are filled with aspiring artists and 'creative-class' quasiprofessionals who accept disempowering, low-wage work in the creative service economy as a sign of distinction and liberation. These new hipsters are just waiting for their big break while waiting tables."
Well, hmmm, I know a bunch of these new hipsters, and I'm just not so sure about the particular way you're writing them off. I don't think these "quasiprofessionals" are any more "disenmpowered" than a post-graduate student forced to teach undergrads at a state school while dreaming for their big break as an tenure track professor -- or, to strike a more Babbit-y note, that they are more "quasiprofessional" or "disempowered" than a third year student at a second rate law school discovering that there are no more partner-track legal jobs in the shrinking, post-Recession field.
Basically my point is that you should watch out which institutions you seem to privilege (the Academy, Corporate America) and which ones you so readily dismiss (the School of Hard Knocks and Bohemian Urban Life).
Number Two // "The hipster is a person who is convinced he is going to be a Great Artist -- even if his art is a form of lifestyle or brand management -- and he tells himself that he will keep working that bartending job another year, keep working as a barista until his band, his brand, his novel takes flight. There will, of course, come a time of reckoning -- what I have sometimes described to friends as a Great Sucking Sound -- as the college-educated aesthetes of the middle class find themselves unable to reproduce their class status. Some would-be hipsters will find salvation in grad school..."
I'm not stopping this quote at an arbitrary point. Again, it really does smack of a comment from someone who is observing the universe of the hipster from the outside & is privileging other kinds of life paths. It's interesting as rhetoric but it doesn't strike me as any more true to life than if I tried to better Randall Jarrell with my own take on Pictures from an Institution.
(And no, if you were wondering, I have not actually read either of the novels I cite in this comment. I just know of them from intellectual history classes I attended during my quite enjoyable but -- to my mind -- more entertaining than truly edifying experience inside the Academy.)
Sincerely
AHB
Rumor has it that there's a hipster version of Huck Finn coming out with every occurrence on "n****r" replaced by "hipster":
http://gothamist.com/2011/01/07/hipster_huckleberry_finn_replaces_n.php