Raggare
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Raggare (a Swedish word roughly corresponding to the English term "pick-up artist", i.e., a person seeking sexual contact with someone) is a subculture found mostly in Sweden and parts of Norway[1] and Finland, Denmark, Germany and Austria.
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[edit] Description of the subculture
Raggare have existed since the 1950s and haven't changed much since then. Cars are an important part of the subculture, especially V8-powered cars and other large cars from the U.S.A..[2] Other popular cars are the fintail Mercedes, the Volvo Amazon, and cars from the Volvo 200 series. Raggare have been described as closley related to the hot rod culture, but when hotrodders in the USA had to do extensive modifications to their cars to stand out raggare could use stock US cars and still stand out compared to the more sober Swedish cars.[2]
Popular sources of influence are elements from American popular culture of the 1950s, such as the movies Rebel Without a Cause with James Dean, and American Graffiti.
The music of choice is rockabilly. Also, musicians Ted Nugent, Dwight Yoakam and Eddie Meduza are popular within the subculture.
The clothes and hairstyle are that of 1950s rockabilly. Blue jeans, cowboy boots, white t-shirts, sometimes with print (also used to store a pack of cigarettes by folding the sleeve), leather[3] or denim jacket. The hair is styled using Brylcreem or some other pomade.
The confederate flag seems to be a popular item in the subculture (possibly inspired by The Dukes of Hazzard) and the peckerwood, but raggare are often oblivious to their meanings and are not necessarily racists, rather they embrace the Rebellious message of the flag.
[edit] Raggare history
When raggare first appeared, they caused a moral panic with concerns about the use of alcohol, violence, high-speed driving, and having sex in the back seat. Raggare gangs was seen as a serious problem.[4] The film Raggare! covered the issue in 1959.
Later, raggare often got into fights with hippies and punks,[5] something described in the punk rock song "Raggare Is a Bunch of Motherfuckers" by Rude Kids (and later re-recorded by Turbonegro). When The Sex Pistols played in Sweden on July 28, 1977, a group of raggare waited outside and cornered some young girls who came out from the show. The girls had safety pins through their cheeks, and the raggare ripped them right out their faces. The band was upstairs drinking beer when they heard about it. Sid Vicious wanted to go down and fight, and someone else suggested they should get the limousine and run them over. In the end, the gig promoter called the police. Nowadays the hostility between Raggare and other subcultures is much lower.
[edit] Raggare today
Still considered a menace to society but not as much and often more seen as amusing, the raggare subculture lives on in Sweden, but in many ways it is still viewed in a negative light. Because of its mostly rural roots, retro-aesthetics, and unusual (for Swedes) pro-American stance, raggare are often (in urban areas and in pop-culture) seen as uneducated white trash with poor taste and a low-brow attitude towards sex. This is how they are normally depicted on film and television, with the most famous modern example being the cult-characters "Ronny & Ragge", a pair of complete idiots who cruise around in a beat-up Ford Taunus. There are several gatherings for raggare around Sweden. The Power Big Meet is the most famous, and is also the biggest car show in the world.
In 1996 the Swedish post office issued a stamp featuring raggare.[6]
Due to the raggare culture there are more restored 1950s cars in Sweden than in the entire USA[7] and although only two 1958 Cadillac convertibles were sold in Sweden there are now 200 of them in Sweden.[7] Between 4000 and 5000 classic US cars are imported to Sweden each year.[7]
[edit] Raggare in media and pop culture
- Eddie Meduza have performed songs like "punk jävlar" ("punk bastards").
- Rude Kids made a song about raggare (later re-recorded by Turbonegro) called "Raggare Is a Bunch of Motherfuckers".
- The 1959 film Raggare! was about raggare and the moral panic of the time.
- The TV series Ronny & Ragge is about two raggare who cruise around in a beat-up Ford Taunus.
- Onkel Kånkel made a song about raggare behaviour during cruising called "Åka femtitalsbil" (later covered by Charta 77).
- The early swedish punk band P.F. Commando has issued a song called "Raggare" on their 1978 Svenne Pop 7" EP, see [1].
[edit] See also
- Bosozoku
- Cadillac
- Greaser (subculture)
- Hot rod
- Kustom Kulture
- Leningrad Cowboys
- Mods and Rockers
- Motorcycle gang
- Outlaw motorcycle club
- Punk rock
- Rednecks
- Rock and roll
- Rockers
- Teddy Boy
[edit] References
- ^ The Police Journal, v.38 1965, page 58
- ^ a b Automobilities by Mike Featherstone, Nigel. Thrift, John Urry. p. 189
- ^ Crime and Its Correction: An International Survey of Attitudes and Practices by John Phillips Conrad, p.126
- ^ Statistics on Delinquents and Delinquency by Walter Albin Lunden, p.134
- ^ England's dreaming: les Sex Pistols et le punk by Jon Savage, Denys Ridrimont, p.435
- ^ Consumption: Critical Concepts in the Social Sciences by Daniel Miller, p.155
- ^ a b c Today: Sweden's car kings: 'greasers' cruising in vintage US wheels
[edit] External links
- Raggare at the Open Directory Project
- Cultural Imperialism or Hyper-Americanization - Swedish raggare and Chicano Lowriders - article by Scott Holmquist
- Raggare - The Movie
- Photos from Power Big Meet by Frank Aschberg