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Are beards coming back?

Started by Tonitrus, December 01, 2014, 09:50:26 PM

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Tonitrus

Between hipsters, ACW re-enactors, and now captains of industry...well-endowed beards seem to be on the rise and making a significant societal comeback. :hmm:

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/11/30/opinion/sunday/why-ceos-are-growing-beards.html

QuoteWhy C.E.O.s Are Growing Beards
NOV. 28, 2014
Photo

By STEPHEN MIHM

THESE are dark days for the shaving industry. After experiencing a century of fairly steady growth, makers of razors and other shaving equipment have seen revenues level off or fall in the last few years. Beards are back.

One striking feature of this resurgence is that for the first time in well over a century, a growing number of the world's business leaders are sporting facial hair. Google's co-founder Sergey Brin, Goldman Sachs's chief executive, Lloyd C. Blankfein, and Marc Benioff, the billionaire founder and chief executive of Salesforce, are just a few prominent examples.

It's easy to view the bearded business leader as a mere extension of the overall beard trend, or yet another sign that work environments are becoming more casual. But the tangled history of facial hair and capitalism suggests that deeper forces are at work.

Historically, beards in the boardroom have been a barometer of the relative vitality of capitalism and its critics. When capitalism has assumed a more swashbuckling, individualistic persona, hair has sprouted on the chins of entrepreneurs and speculators. But when forces bent on destroying capitalism have been ascendant — or when well-regulated, faceless corporations have defined economic life — beards have waned.

For most of the modern era, beards and mustaches grew only at the margins of society. In the United States, the founding fathers eschewed facial hair. The same cleanshaven look prevailed throughout Europe among the capitalist classes.

In Europe in the 1830s and 1840s, socialists, Chartists and other critics of capitalism began growing beards. As a young man, Friedrich Engels, who would go on to write "The Communist Manifesto" with Karl Marx, organized a "moustache evening" among his friends to taunt cleanshaven bourgeois "philistinism." Marx himself cultivated a huge beard and thick mustache. A Prussian spy later sent to keep tabs on him reported with a mixture of awe and anxiety: "His hair and beard are quite black. The latter he does not shave."

Beards were scary to capitalists. But after reactionaries crushed the violent uprisings of 1848 in Continental Europe, the threat of what the Times of London described that year as "foreign bearded propagandists" began receding in the capitalist imagination. In response, beards started to make inroads among the defenders of free enterprise in Britain and the United States. As one historian of the hirsute, Christopher Oldstone-Moore of Wright State University, has concluded, "fearful associations of facial hair dissolved, and respectable men were at liberty to let their beards grow."

Indeed, beards became an emblem of bourgeois masculinity. Proponents of the new "beard movement" (yes, it was called that) argued that "the bondage of the beard to the dictatorship of an effeminate fashion" had yielded a world of "woman-faced men."

Many factors contributed to this trend. In the United States, the gold rush that began in 1849 threw countless middle-class men into a get-rich-quick world of prospecting where shaving was discretionary. The Civil War must also be credited, as wide-eyed boys went off to war cleanshaven and returned as bearded men.

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Notably, this is when we witness the rise of facial hair as an essential accouterment of the capitalist class. Jay Gould, the most feared financier of the era, grew a beard that concealed most of his face, making an already inscrutable countenance even more difficult to read. Other robber barons followed suit.

These men didn't view themselves as conformists, much less corporate drones, but as rugged individualists who single-handedly built vast business empires. Their beards became part of their larger-than-life brand. Henry Clay Frick, Andrew Carnegie, Collis P. Huntington, William Henry Vanderbilt and almost every other member of the vilified capitalist class sported extravagant facial hair.

But nothing lasts forever. From the 1870s onward, as the workers' rebellion revived internationally, a new wave of labor radicals sported long, unruly beards. In the popular press, as the conflict between labor and capital turned increasingly violent in the 1880s, facial hair became a shorthand for the forcible resistance to capitalism. Illustrated newspapers covering the Haymarket bombing in 1886 in Chicago showed radicals wearing unkempt, tangled beards.

Cartoonists soon began depicting labor, and strikers in particular, as modern-day Samsons, pulling down the columns of an orderly society, killing their capitalist adversaries and themselves in the process. One barber quoted by this newspaper around the turn of the century put the matter bluntly, when describing various "cranks" and radicals: "They carry their banners on their faces, proclaiming them Populists or Anarchists, or some other sort of ists."

Most "respectable" men, including capitalists, ran from this image. While the invention of the safety razor by King C. Gillette in 1901 is often blamed for the demise of the beard, businessmen (and labor leaders eager to avoid the taint of radicalism) had already gone for a neatly trimmed mustache before going entirely cleanshaven by the dawn of the new century. The changing fashion may also have reflected a shift away from the untrammeled, individualistic capitalism of the Gilded Age to something more corporate, faceless — and beardless.

In succeeding decades, beards and mustaches all but disappeared. The organization man of 20th-century America was cast as cleanshaven, his individuality subsumed into a larger, corporate identity. Iconic critics of capitalism — Che Guevara, Fidel Castro, Ho Chi Minh — kept alive the identification of facial hair with leftist politics.

But with the end of the Cold War and the defeat of Communism, the groundwork for a scruffy capitalism was laid. In the semiotics of capital today, whiskers no longer code as a threat. With free market ideology essentially unopposed by any major power and energized by the entrepreneurial swagger of the technology world, beards are back in business.

Stephen Mihm is an associate professor of history at the University of Georgia, a regular contributor to Bloomberg View and the author of "A Nation of Counterfeiters: Capitalists, Con Men, and the Making of the United States."

Not that it matters.  On a personal lever (I hate beards), my dad, who was always clean shaven, took on a beard when he retired several years ago.

Tonitrus

And on the same theme, the rise of the "Lumbersexual" movement (likely a form of hipsterism):

http://gearjunkie.com/the-rise-of-the-lumbersexual


Sheilbh

#2
I'll shave my beard today :(

They've come back. I think they're mostly on their way out again now. But some men (I think possibly me) simply look better with a beard, so hopefully we're moving into more folically tolerant times :o

Edit: Also that article's an interesting American perspective. Needless to say in late Victorian Britain a strong beard was not a sign of a radical:


Edit: I always love when I read Trollope and you can normally tell how attractive and morally upstanding his male characters are by his description of their facial hair. In general 'masculine whiskers' are a very good sign. But he practiced what he preached:
Let's bomb Russia!

Ideologue

Yeah, I'm pretty sure they're square now or close to it.  I mean, they'd almost have to be.

I don't shave but once every week or so because I'm lazy, not because I'm fashionable.
Kinemalogue
Current reviews: The 'Burbs (9/10); Gremlins 2: The New Batch (9/10); John Wick: Chapter 2 (9/10); A Cure For Wellness (4/10)

CountDeMoney

Quote from: Tonitrus on December 01, 2014, 09:50:26 PM
Between hipsters, ACW re-enactors, and now captains of industry...

You forgot the unemployed.

Quotemy dad, who was always clean shaven, took on a beard when he retired several years ago.

Like I said.

Ed Anger

I let mine grow out. What was once a small gray patch on my neck is now about 70% gray.
Stay Alive...Let the Man Drive

PDH

It's winter in Laramie, so I am growing my annual protective outer coat on my face.  A friend calls it my "hobo-beard."
I have come to believe that the whole world is an enigma, a harmless enigma that is made terrible by our own mad attempt to interpret it as though it had an underlying truth.
-Umberto Eco

-------
"I'm pretty sure my level of depression has nothing to do with how much of a fucking asshole you are."

-CdM

Sheilbh

Quote from: PDH on December 01, 2014, 10:14:21 PM
It's winter in Laramie, so I am growing my annual protective outer coat on my face.  A friend calls it my "hobo-beard."
Whenever I'm bearded my dad introduces me as 'my son, the Ayatollah' :lol:
Let's bomb Russia!

derspiess

"If you can play a guitar and harmonica at the same time, like Bob Dylan or Neil Young, you're a genius. But make that extra bit of effort and strap some cymbals to your knees, suddenly people want to get the hell away from you."  --Rich Hall

Valmy

We still have a long way to go to recapture their 19th century era of glory.
Quote"This is a Russian warship. I propose you lay down arms and surrender to avoid bloodshed & unnecessary victims. Otherwise, you'll be bombed."

Zmiinyi defenders: "Russian warship, go fuck yourself."

dps

Quote from: Sheilbh

Edit: Also that article's an interesting American perspective. Needless to say in late Victorian Britain a strong beard was not a sign of a radical

Well, that wasn't a very accurate point, anyway.  From 1864 through 1892, every Presidential election was won by a candidate with facial hair (all of them except Cleveland had full beards;  Cleveland had a mustache).  But since then, only the 1904 and 1908 Presidential elections have been won by a candidate with facial hair (and neither of those had a full beard, just mustaches.

PRC

Quote from: derspiess on December 01, 2014, 10:22:02 PM
Been back for a while. 

Yeah, they've been in for several years now.

Syt

Quote from: PRC on December 01, 2014, 11:50:40 PM
Quote from: derspiess on December 01, 2014, 10:22:02 PM
Been back for a while. 

Yeah, they've been in for several years now.

Indeed. Even Austrian public TV's ORF news page had an article about it, which is usually a sign that the trend is nearly over. Though I liked them saying that some inner cities these days look like there's a casting call for a historical drama set in the second half of the 19th century.
I am, somehow, less interested in the weight and convolutions of Einstein's brain than in the near certainty that people of equal talent have lived and died in cotton fields and sweatshops.
—Stephen Jay Gould

Proud owner of 42 Zoupa Points.

Syt

I am, somehow, less interested in the weight and convolutions of Einstein's brain than in the near certainty that people of equal talent have lived and died in cotton fields and sweatshops.
—Stephen Jay Gould

Proud owner of 42 Zoupa Points.

Eddie Teach

They always come back, given half a chance.
To sleep, perchance to dream. But in that sleep of death, what dreams may come?