So you wanna be a hipster?

http://badgerherald.com/news/2009/03/27/so_you_wanna_be_a_hi.php

Panel debates definition of term, movement's status as hippie-esque 
'counterculture'

by Matt Marx
Friday, March 27, 2009

A panel knowledgeable of "hipster culture" agreed Thursday in front 
of an audience at the University of Wisconsin the term escapes rigid 
definitions and is not necessarily comprised of a unified group of people.

Many had distinct ideas about the tenets of the culture, although not 
one of the five panelists was a self-proclaimed hipster.

Panelist Randall Luecke, a member of local band Crane Your Swan Neck, 
thinks the term "hipster" is only a word and has no great definitional impact.

"It's a way for people to group [others], for people on the outside 
of the group," Luecke said. "It's not a unifier from the outside; 
it's meant to cut it down."

Y Mae Sussman, panelist and Wisconsin Union Directorate Music 
Committee member, said the term was pejorative, and "people generally 
don't want to be called it."

Dane County Supervisor Wyndham Manning, a panelist, argued the 
hipster culture can be derived from previous counterculture movements.

"The way that I see hipsters today is the sort of evolution of (the 
hippie) alternative culture, very music-driven," Manning said.

Sussman pointed to how the hipster movement is not a cohesive, 
concrete movement, although some similarities among hipsters can be seen.

According to Sussman, some of the characteristics of the culture are 
a keen fashion sense and rampant consumption of media, like music and 
film. She went on to say some of the more prominent hipsters place 
high value on counterculture.

Ryan Huber, a clothing store owner and panelist, attributed some 
recognizable features to hipsters such as high-quality clothing like 
expensive, tapered jeans, messenger bags, "awesome bicycles" and a 
great amount of enthusiasm.

Sussman argued hipster fashion is not so different from the 
mainstream today, citing examples of hipster fashion in many of 
today's high school students.

Bob Marshall, editor in chief of student music magazine Emmie, 
discussed how the hipster movement has become a marketing label.

"It's a target audience. I think people know how to advertise to it, 
know how to sell to it," Marshall said.

Sussman agreed with this notion of the term "hipster" as a marketing tool.

"I think marketers and commercial entities have seized upon this 
(culture)," Sussman said.

The panelists agreed music is an integral part of the hipster 
culture, while no singular musical taste could be found that all hipsters like.

Marshall pointed to Pitchfork Media's website as a leader in what 
most hipsters listen to, but said "it was hard to find a formula for 
what people listen to."

While not all panelists agreed on whether hipster culture was 
counterculture, Luecke said it comprises some elements of the hipster culture.

"If you challenge someone's assumptions about how you should look, 
then it's counter to something," Leucke said.

Huber agreed, saying the culture runs against some societal norms.

.


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