Swingjugend
From The Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia
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The Swing Kids (German: Swingjugend) were a group of jazz and Swing lovers in the Germany of the 1930s, mainly in Hamburg (St. Pauli) and Berlin. They were composed of 14- to 18-year old boys and girls in high school, most of them middle- or upper-class students, but some apprentice workers as well. They sought the British and American way of life, defining themselves in Swing music, and opposing the National-Socialist ideology, especially the Hitlerjugend.
In popular culture
The 1993 film Swing Kids examined this underground culture of rebellion during Nazi Germany in some detail. Directed by Thomas Carter and starring Robert Sean Leonard, Christian Bale, Frank Whaley, and Kenneth Branagh (uncredited), the picture was not a commercial success but sustains a large underground following.
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Alexei Bychenko, Anglophile, Anna Goldsteiner, Artur Lauinger, August 1941, Caydee Denney, Charlie and his Orchestra, Degenerate music, Deividas Stagniūnas, Detlev Peukert, Edelweiss Pirates, Emil Mangelsdorff, Exi (subculture), German jazz, German resistance to Nazism, Gestapo, Ghetto Swingers, Givi Margvelashvili, Glossary of Nazi Germany, Günter Discher, Günther Schifter, Hans Massaquoi, Heinz Lord, History of Lindy Hop, History of modern Western subcultures, Johannes Heesters, John Coughlin (figure skater), Katherine Copely, League of German Girls, Lindy Hop, List of World War II films since 1990, Ludwig W. Adamec, Moringen concentration camp, Music of Germany, Nazi salute, Negermusik, Nightclub, One Half of a Whole Decade, Potápky, Quest Crew, Ralph Giordano, Reich Chamber of Music, Sophie Scholl, Takeshi Honda, Teenage (2013 American film), Yuki Nishino, Zazou
See also
- German resistance
- Swing Kids (film)
- 1920s and 1930s subcultures
- Youth culture
- Zazou
- German jazz
- Negermusik
- Nightclub