Ticklishchap
One Too Many
- Messages
- 1,742
- Location
- London
How many of you remember, or were influenced by, the Young Fogey phenomenon or its American counterpart? I was having a nostalgic conversation about this with an old friend over the Christmas period. At university in the mid-80s, I was a fully paid-up Young Fogey. It was an informal cultural movement among a segment of young men at that time, which chimed with the tastes I had already formed in my teens because it favoured traditional clothing, the elegant but lived-in look and the use of country clothing even in town. Therefore I and a circle of friends wore old tweed jackets and corduroy trousers, military or other wool sweaters, brogues, braces, waxed Barbour jackets, Duffel coats – which we used to Anglicise to Duffle for some reason. My tastes have changed little since then in fact! I rode an old bike with a basket attached to the handlebars. The YF phenomenon extended to language: we listened to the wireless rather than the radio, addressed our male friends as ‘old chap’ and would ‘take tea’ rather than ‘have tea’. There was a conservative aspect to Young Fogeydom which I didn’t particularly identify with (I liked abstract art and was politically liberal), but the conserving side of it was positive, favouring natural materials, local craftsmanship rather than mass production – anticipating many environmentalist themes.
There was a Young Fogey handbook, but none of us read it at the time because we knew what to wear and buy and how to conduct ourselves. But as I mentioned on another thread, re. the Guernsey sweater, I was given a copy as a present some years later.
There was a Young Fogey handbook, but none of us read it at the time because we knew what to wear and buy and how to conduct ourselves. But as I mentioned on another thread, re. the Guernsey sweater, I was given a copy as a present some years later.