U.S. Culture
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Dress
In many regions of the world, people wear traditional costumes at
festivals or holidays, and sometimes more regularly. Americans, however, do not have distinctive folk attire with a long tradition. Except for the
varied and characteristic clothing of Native American peoples, dress in
the United States has rarely been specific to a certain region or based on
the careful preservation of decorative patterns and crafts. American dress
is derived from the fabrics and fashions of the Europeans who began
colonizing the country in the 17th century. Early settlers incorporated
some of the forms worn by indigenous peoples, such as moccasins and
garments made from animal skins (Benjamin Franklin is famous for flaunting
a raccoon cap when he traveled to Europe), but in general, fashion in the
United States adapted and modified European styles. Despite the number and
variety of immigrants in the United States, American clothing has tended
to be homogeneous, and attire from an immigrant’s homeland was often
rapidly exchanged for American apparel.
American dress is distinctive because of its casualness. American style in
the 20th century is recognizably more informal than in Europe, and for its
fashion sources it is more dependent on what people on the streets are
wearing. European fashions take their cues from the top of the fashion
hierarchy, dictated by the world-famous haute couture (high fashion)
houses of Paris, France, and recently those of Milan, Italy, and London,
England. Paris designers, both today and in the past, have also dressed
wealthy and fashionable Americans, who copied French styles. Although
European designs remain a significant influence on American tastes,
American fashions more often come from popular sources, such as the school
and the street, as well as television and movies. In the last quarter of
the 20th century, American designers often found inspiration in the
imaginative attire worn by young people in cities and ballparks, and that
worn by workers in factories and fields.
Blue jeans are probably the single most representative article of American
clothing. They were originally invented by tailor Jacob Davis, who
together with dry-goods salesman Levi Strauss patented the idea in 1873 as
durable clothing for miners. Blue jeans (also known as dungarees) spread
among workers of all kinds in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, especially among cowboys, farmers, loggers, and railroad workers. During
the 1950s, actors Marlon Brando and James Dean made blue jeans fashionable
by wearing them in movies, and jeans became part of the image of teenage
rebelliousness. This fashion statement exploded in the 1960s and 1970s as
Levi's became a fundamental part of the youth culture focused on civil
rights and antiwar protests. By the late 1970s, almost everyone in the
United States wore blue jeans, and youths around the world sought them. As
designers began to create more sophisticated styles of blue jeans and to
adjust their fit, jeans began to express the American emphasis on
informality and the importance of subtlety of detail. By highlighting the
right label and achieving the right look, blue jeans, despite their worker
origins, ironically embodied the status consciousness of American fashion
and the eagerness to approximate the latest fad.
American informality in dress is such a strong part of American culture
that many workplaces have adopted the idea of “casual Friday,” a day when
workers are encouraged to dress down from their usual professional attire.
For many high-tech industries located along the West Coast, as well as
among faculty at colleges and universities, this emphasis on casual attire
is a daily occurrence, not just reserved for Fridays.
The fashion industry in the United States, along with its companion
cosmetics industry, grew enormously in the second half of the 20th century
and became a major source of competition for French fashion. Especially
notable during the late 20th century was the incorporation of sports logos
and styles, from athletic shoes to tennis shirts and baseball caps, into
standard American wardrobes. American informality is enshrined in the
wardrobes created by world-famous U.S. designers such as Calvin Klein, Liz
Claiborne, and Ralph Lauren. Lauren especially adopted the American look, based in part on the tradition of the old West (cowboy hats, boots, and
jeans) and in part on the clean-cut sportiness of suburban style (blazers, loafers, and khakis).
Sports and Recreation
Large numbers of Americans watch and participate in sports activities, which are a deeply ingrained part of American life. Americans use sports to express interest in health and fitness and to occupy their leisure time. Sports also allow Americans to connect and identify with mass culture. Americans pour billions of dollars into sports and their related enterprises, affecting the economy, family habits, school life, and clothing styles. Americans of all classes, races, sexes, and ages participate in sports activities—from toddlers in infant swimming groups and teenagers participating in school athletics to middle-aged adults bowling or golfing and older persons practicing t’ai chi.
Public subsidies and private sponsorships support the immense network of
outdoor and indoor sports, recreation, and athletic competitions. Except
for those sponsored by public schools, most sports activities are
privately funded, and even American Olympic athletes receive no direct
national sponsorship. Little League baseball teams, for example, are
usually sponsored by local businesses. Many commercial football, basketball, baseball, and hockey teams reflect large private investments.
Although sports teams are privately owned, they play in stadiums that are
usually financed by taxpayer-provided subsidies such as bond measures.
State taxes provide some money for state university sporting events.
Taxpayer dollars also support state parks, the National Park Service, and
the Forest Service, which provide places for Americans to enjoy camping, fishing, hiking, and rafting. Public money also funds the Coast Guard, whose crews protect those enjoying boating around the nation's shores.
Sports in North America go back to the Native Americans, who played forms
of lacrosse and field hockey. During colonial times, early Dutch settlers
bowled on New York City's Bowling Green, still a small park in southern
Manhattan. However, organized sports competitions and local participatory
sports on a substantial scale go back only to the late 19th century.
Schools and colleges began to encourage athletics as part of a balanced
program emphasizing physical as well as mental vigor, and churches began
to loosen strictures against leisure and physical pleasures. As work
became more mechanized, more clerical, and less physical during the late
19th century, Americans became concerned with diet and exercise. With
sedentary urban activities replacing rural life, Americans used sports and
outdoor relaxation to balance lives that had become hurried and confined.
Biking, tennis, and golf became popular for those who could afford them, while sandlot baseball and an early version of basketball became popular
city activities. At the same time, organizations such as the Boy Scouts
and the Young Men’s Christian Association (YMCA) began to sponsor sports
as part of their efforts to counteract unruly behavior among young people.
Baseball teams developed in Eastern cities during the 1850s and spread to
the rest of the nation during the Civil War in the 1860s. Baseball quickly
became the national pastime and began to produce sports heroes such as Cy
Young, Ty Cobb, and Babe Ruth in the first half of the 20th century. With
its city-based loyalties and all-American aura, baseball appealed to many
immigrants, who as players and fans used the game as a way to fit into
American culture.
Starting in the latter part of the 19th century, football was played on
college campuses, and intercollegiate games quickly followed. By the early
20th century, football had become a feature of college life across the
nation. In the 1920s football pep rallies were commonly held on college
campuses, and football players were among the most admired campus leaders.
That enthusiasm has now spilled way beyond college to Americans throughout
the country. Spectators also watch the professional football teams of the
National Football League (NFL) with enthusiasm.
Basketball is another sport that is very popular as both a spectator and
participant sport. The National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA)
hosts championships for men’s and women’s collegiate teams. Held annually
in March, the men’s NCAA national championship is one of the most popular
sporting events in the United States. The top men’s professional
basketball league in the United States is the National Basketball
Association; the top women’s is Women’s National Basketball Association.
In addition, many people play basketball in amateur leagues and
organizations. It is also common to see people playing basketball in parks
and local gymnasiums around the country.
Another major sport played in the United States is ice hockey. Ice hockey
began as an amateur sport played primarily in the Northeast. The first
U.S. professional ice hockey team was founded in Boston in 1924. Ice
hockey’s popularity has spread throughout the country since the 1960s. The
NCAA holds a national collegiate ice hockey championship in April of each
year. The country’s top professional league is the National Hockey League
(NHL). NHL teams play a regular schedule that culminates in the
championship series. The winner is awarded the Stanley Cup, the league’s
top prize.
Television transformed sports in the second half of the 20th century. As
more Americans watched sports on television, the sports industry grew into
an enormous business, and sports events became widely viewed among
Americans as cultural experiences. Many Americans shared televised moments
of exaltation and triumph throughout the year: baseball during the spring
and summer and its World Series in the early fall, football throughout the
fall crowned by the Super Bowl in January, and the National Basketball
Association (NBA) championships in the spring. The Olympic Games, watched
by millions of people worldwide, similarly rivet Americans to their
televisions as they watch outstanding athletes compete on behalf of their
nations. Commercial sports are part of practically every home in America
and have allowed sports heroes to gain prominence in the national
imagination and to become fixtures of the consumer culture. As well-known
faces and bodies, sports celebrities such as basketball player Michael
Jordan and baseball player Mark McGwire are hired to endorse products.
Although televised games remove the viewing public from direct contact
with events, they have neither diminished the fervor of team
identification nor dampened the enthusiasm for athletic participation.
Americans watch more sports on television than ever, and they personally
participate in more varied sporting activities and athletic clubs.
Millions of young girls and boys across the country play soccer, baseball, tennis, and field hockey.
At the end of the 20th century, Americans were taking part in individual sports of all kinds—jogging, bicycling, swimming, skiing, rock climbing, playing tennis, as well as more unusual sports such as bungee jumping, hang gliding, and wind surfing. As Americans enjoy more leisure time, and as Hollywood and advertising emphasize trim, well-developed bodies, sports have become a significant component of many people's lives. Many Americans now invest significant amounts of money in sports equipment, clothing, and gym memberships. As a result, more people are dressing in sporty styles of clothing. Sports logos and athletic fashions have become common aspects of people’s wardrobes, as people need to look as though they participate in sports to be in style. Sports have even influenced the cars Americans drive, as sport utility vehicles accommodate the rugged terrain, elaborate equipment, and sporty lifestyles of their owners.
Probably the most significant long-term development in 20th-century sports
has been the increased participation of minorities and women. Throughout
the early 20th century, African Americans made outstanding contributions
to sports, despite being excluded from organized white teams. The
exclusion of black players from white baseball led to the creation of a
separate Negro National League in 1920. On the world stage, track-and-
field star Jessie Owens became a national hero when he won four gold
medals and set world and Olympic records at the Berlin Olympics in 1936.
The racial segregation that prevented African Americans from playing
baseball in the National League until 1947 has been replaced by the
enormous successes of African Americans in all fields of sport.
Before the 20th century women could not play in most organized sports.
Soon, however, they began to enter the sports arena. Helen Wills Moody, a
tennis champion during the 1920s, and Babe Didrikson Zaharias, one of the
20th century’s greatest women athletes, were examples of physical grace
and agility. In 1972 Title IX of the Education Amendments Act outlawed
discrimination based on gender in education, including school sports.
Schools then spent additional funding on women's athletics, which provided
an enormous boost to women’s sports of all kinds, especially basketball, which became very popular. Women's college basketball, part of the
National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA), is a popular focus of
interest. By the end of the 20th century, this enthusiasm led to the
creation of a major professional women’s basketball league. Women have
become a large part of athletics, making their mark in a wide range of
sports.
Sports have become one of the most visible expressions of the vast extension of democracy in 20th-century America. They have become more inclusive, with many Americans both personally participating and enjoying sports as spectators. Once readily available only to the well-to-do, sports and recreation attract many people, aided by the mass media, the schools and colleges, the federal and state highway and park systems, and increased leisure time.
Celebrations and Holidays
Americans celebrate an enormous variety of festivals and holidays because
they come from around the globe and practice many religions. They also
celebrate holidays specific to the United States that commemorate
historical events or encourage a common national memory. Holidays in
America are often family or community events. Many Americans travel long
distances for family gatherings or take vacations during holidays. In
fact, by the end of the 20th century, many national holidays in the United
States had become three-day weekends, which many people used as mini
vacations. Except for the Fourth of July and Veterans Day, most
commemorative federal holidays, including Memorial Day, Labor Day,
Columbus Day, and Presidents’ Day, are celebrated on Mondays so that
Americans can enjoy a long weekend. Because many Americans tend to create
vacations out of these holiday weekends rather than celebrate a particular
event, some people believe the original significance of many of these
occasions has been eroded.
Because the United States is a secular society founded on the separation
of church and state, many of the most meaningful religiously based
festivals and rituals, such as Easter, Rosh Hashanah, and Ramadan, are not
enshrined as national events, with one major exception. Christmas, and the
holiday season surrounding it, is an enormous commercial enterprise, a
fixture of the American social calendar, and deeply embedded in the
popular imagination. Not until the 19th century did Christmas in the
United States begin to take on aspects of the modern holiday celebration, such as exchanging gifts, cooking and eating traditional foods, and
putting up often-elaborate Christmas decorations. The holiday has grown in
popularity and significance ever since. Santa Claus; brightly decorated
Christmas trees; and plenty of wreathes, holly, and ribbons help define
the season for most children. Indeed, because some religious faiths do not
celebrate Christmas, the Christmas season has expanded in recent years to
become the “holiday season,” embracing Hanukkah, the Jewish Festival of
Lights, and Kwanzaa, a celebration of African heritage. Thus, the
Christmas season has become the closest thing to a true national festival
in the United States.
The expansion of Christmas has even begun to encroach on the most
indigenous of American festivals, Thanksgiving. Celebrated on the last
Thursday in November, Thanksgiving has largely shed its original religious
meaning (as a feast of giving thanks to God) to become a celebration of
the bounty of food and the warmth of family life in America. American
children usually commemorate the holiday’s origins at school, where they
re-create the original event: Pilgrims sharing a harvest feast with Native
Americans. Both the historical and the religious origins of the event have
largely given way to a secular celebration centered on the traditional
Thanksgiving meal: turkey—an indigenous American bird—accompanied by foods
common in early New England settlements, such as pumpkins, squashes, and
cranberries. Since many Americans enjoy a four-day holiday at
Thanksgiving, the occasion encourages family reunions and travel. Some
Americans also contribute time and food to the needy and the homeless
during the Thanksgiving holiday.
Another holiday that has lost its older, religious meaning in the United
States is Halloween, the eve of All Saints’ Day. Halloween has become a
celebration of witches, ghosts, goblins, and candy that is especially
attractive to children. On this day and night, October 31, many homes are
decorated and lit by jack-o'-lanterns, pumpkins that have been hollowed
out and carved. Children dress up and go trick-or-treating, during which
they receive treats from neighbors. An array of orange-colored candies has
evolved from this event, and most trick-or-treat bags usually brim with
chocolate bars and other confections.
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