Hipsters are Not a Crime
I'm going to make T-shirts that say Hipsters are Not a Crime. After the explosion of anti-hipster sentiments sparked by an article about soccer, and after reading an article by local author Douglas Haddow in Adbusters, I feel like I need to make some sort of rebuttal. Now, I don't voluntary subscribe myself to the epithet hipster, but I realize, indeed I'm at many of the parties in the photographs in that article, that I must share some of the arbritrary tenets of this seemingly fashion-conscious doctrine. And I do realize that this is what they do and if anyone has a mandate, nay duty, to write about hipsterdom and its self-obsession its Adbusters, indeed I even sort of defended them on Tumblr. Fuck it, I basically wrote the same article like 4 years ago...
But Counter Culture always has been co-opted by those who are interested in it purely for their aesthetics. Yet, is that not what you yourselves are clearly focusing on, rather than some of the tenets of so called hipsterdom? Did not Ed Van Der Elsken photograph your precious poets of the Left Bank? Would Confessions of an Opium Eater not read like an exercise in absolute slacker ethics? Did the failed prophets of Debord's vision not hate the posers, the surrealists, and the architects? Were the drunk revolutionaries passed out in Moineau's not those of your beloved May '68? Was Johnny Rotten not an absolute expression of the malaise of Thatcherite England? Are the crowds of hipsters, with their fixed gears whipping about the city, living on dollar slice pizza and Pabst Blue Ribbon, are they not Vaneigem's juvenile delinquents, does their happiness not justify existence itself? Be careful not to attack leisure, for leisure is the real revolutionary question. You know that Kalle.
Most hipsters, most of my friends, are actually quite poor, politically active, artists/musicians, vegans, bike riding, spontaneous young people. We are not the sneaker-obsesses, coke snorting, skate-wiggers I believe the article is referring too. The author of the article knows this, and knows the poetics of aesthetics are as necessary as the actions they disguise.
photo by Drhaddow on Flickr.









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it's not the clothes, or what great things you to in society, i think it's the way people relate to each other that is the most difficult for me to deal with. Mostly when dealing with Hipsters in the city i feel they are kind of a-holes and proud of it. And although most people's cliques are designed for this reason it just seems that the prescribed lifestyle the these types lead is much more than they make it out to be. "Most hipsters, most of my friends, are actually quite poor, politically active, artists/musicians, vegans, bike riding, spontaneous young people. We are not the sneaker-obsesses, coke snorting, skate-wiggers I believe the article is referring too." Mostly I think these things are relevant because they are all true. There is some random virtue given to the things that most people do in their lifestyle, and i find the kids in the Vancouver Hipster crowd (and i mean the real ones, not the posers) to be fairly stoked on themselves a lot and quite testy and extremely judgmental and narrow minded. But i don't blame them, I blame .....geography.