*** Welcome to piglix ***

Young fogey


"Young fogey" is a term humorously applied, in British context, to some younger-generation, rather buttoned-down writers and journalists, such as Simon Heffer, Charles Moore and, for a while, A. N. Wilson. The term is attributed to Alan Watkins writing in 1984 in The Spectator.

"Young " is still used to describe conservative young men (aged approximately between 15 and 40) who dress in a vintage style (usually that of the 1920s-1950s, also known as the "Brideshead" look (after the influence of the Evelyn Waugh novel Brideshead Revisited), and who tend towards erudite, conservative cultural pursuits. The young-fogey style of dress also has some surface similarity with the American preppy style, but it is essentially an Anglo-centric style, restricted to the United Kingdom and the more anglicised areas of the British Commonwealth such as Australia and New Zealand.

The movement reached its peak in the mid-1980s with adherents such as A.N. Wilson and Gavin Stamp. The movement declined in the 1990s, but still has a following amongst students at Oxford, Cambridge, Durham, Edinburgh, St Andrews and other universities in the Commonwealth most notably the University of Melbourne and Sydney, as well as in some professions (in particular the antiques and arts dealing world, and the minority classical architecture practices). At Oxford and Cambridge, teenage undergraduates can be seen wearing tweed and affecting mannerisms that are reminiscent of a long-gone era; particular strongholds of young fogeys include the Oxford University Conservative Association and Trinity College, Cambridge, but they are also seen elsewhere.


...
Wikipedia

...