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Pachuco



 
 


Pachucos are Mexican American
Mexican American

Mexican Americans are United States of Mexican descent. They account for 9% of the country's population: 28.3 million Americans listed their ancestry as Mexican as of 2006....
 youths who developed their own subculture
Subculture

In sociology, anthropology and cultural studies, a subculture is a group of people with a culture which differentiates them from the larger culture to which they belong....
 during the 1930s and 1940s in the Southwestern United States
Southwestern United States

The Southwestern area of the United States could be defined as the states west of the Mississippi River, with the qualification of a certain northern limit, such as the 37th parallel north, 38th parallel north, 39th parallel north, or 40th parallel north line....
. They wore distinctive clothing (such as zoot suit
Zoot suit

A zoot suit is a Suit with high-waisted, wide-legged, tight-cuffed, Wiktionary:pegged trousers, and a long coat with wide lapels and wide padded shoulders....
s) and spoke their own dialect of Mexican Spanish
Mexican Spanish

Mexican Spanish is the dialect of the Spanish language, as spoken in Mexico.Spanish was brought to present day Mexico around 500 years ago. As a result of Mexico City's central role in the colonial administration of Viceroyalty of New Spain, the population of the city included relatively large numbers of speakers from Spain....
, called Caló
Caló (Chicano)

Cal? is an argot or slang of Mexican Spanish which originated during the first half of the 20th century in the Southwestern United States. It is a product of zoot suit or Pachuco culture....
 or Pachuco. Due to their double marginalization stemming from their youth and ethnicity, there has always been a close association and cultural cross-pollination between the Pachuco subculture and gang
Gang

A gang is a Group of people who through the organization, formation, and establishment of an assemblage share a common Identity . In current usage it typically denotes a organized crime or else a criminal affiliation....
 subculture.






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Pachuco


Pachucos are Mexican American
Mexican American

Mexican Americans are United States of Mexican descent. They account for 9% of the country's population: 28.3 million Americans listed their ancestry as Mexican as of 2006....
 youths who developed their own subculture
Subculture

In sociology, anthropology and cultural studies, a subculture is a group of people with a culture which differentiates them from the larger culture to which they belong....
 during the 1930s and 1940s in the Southwestern United States
Southwestern United States

The Southwestern area of the United States could be defined as the states west of the Mississippi River, with the qualification of a certain northern limit, such as the 37th parallel north, 38th parallel north, 39th parallel north, or 40th parallel north line....
. They wore distinctive clothing (such as zoot suit
Zoot suit

A zoot suit is a Suit with high-waisted, wide-legged, tight-cuffed, Wiktionary:pegged trousers, and a long coat with wide lapels and wide padded shoulders....
s) and spoke their own dialect of Mexican Spanish
Mexican Spanish

Mexican Spanish is the dialect of the Spanish language, as spoken in Mexico.Spanish was brought to present day Mexico around 500 years ago. As a result of Mexico City's central role in the colonial administration of Viceroyalty of New Spain, the population of the city included relatively large numbers of speakers from Spain....
, called Caló
Caló (Chicano)

Cal? is an argot or slang of Mexican Spanish which originated during the first half of the 20th century in the Southwestern United States. It is a product of zoot suit or Pachuco culture....
 or Pachuco. Due to their double marginalization stemming from their youth and ethnicity, there has always been a close association and cultural cross-pollination between the Pachuco subculture and gang
Gang

A gang is a Group of people who through the organization, formation, and establishment of an assemblage share a common Identity . In current usage it typically denotes a organized crime or else a criminal affiliation....
 subculture. For this reason, many members of the predominant Anglo
Anglo

The term Anglo is used as a prefix to indicate a relation to the Angles, England or the English people, as in the terms Anglo-Saxon, English American, Anglo-Celtic, and Anglo-Indian....
 culture assumed that anyone dressed as a pachuco was a gang member.

One famous pachuco is Roy Estrada
Roy Estrada

Roy Estrada is an United States musician and singer, best known for his bass guitar work with Frank Zappa and for co-founding Little Feat....
, a bass player and former performer in the Mothers of Invention.

Origin


The Pachuco style originated in El Paso, Texas( E.P.T ) and Ciudad Juarez Mexico and moved westward, following the line of migration of Mexican railroad workers ("traquero
Traquero

A traquero is a railroad track worker, especially a Mexican or Mexican American railroad track worker . The word derives from "traque", Spanglish for "track"....
s") into Los Angeles, where it developed further. The word "pachuco" originated, probably early in the 20th century, in a Mexican Spanish
Mexican Spanish

Mexican Spanish is the dialect of the Spanish language, as spoken in Mexico.Spanish was brought to present day Mexico around 500 years ago. As a result of Mexico City's central role in the colonial administration of Viceroyalty of New Spain, the population of the city included relatively large numbers of speakers from Spain....
 slang term for a resident of the cities of El Paso and Juarez. Even today, El Paso and Juarez are the "El Chucos Town" or "El Pasiente" to some.

Another theory, the derivation of the word "pachuco" Pachuca, the name of the city in the Mexican state of Hidalgo where Mickey Garcia, thought by some to be the originator of the zoot suit, befriended a local of the town known as "El Hueso". El Hueso was an elderly man known only to have a tattoo on his right shoulder It is unknown what the tattoo says but few have claimed that it bears two names. One name begins with a J and the other with a B. Mickey Garcia brought his style from Pachuca, Mexico to San Diego. Another theory says that the word derives from pocho, a derogatory term for a Mexican born in the United States who has lost touch with the Mexican culture
Culture of Mexico

The culture of Mexico includes many features from Mexico's prehispanic past and the Spain colonial period. The people of Mexico take great pride in their country, culture, ethnicity, and lifestyle....
. The word is also said to mean "punk" or "troublemaker".

The Mexican comedian and film actor Germán Valdés, better-known by his artistic name "Tin-Tan", introduced Pachuco dress and slang to the Mexican population through his Golden age
Golden age of the cinema of Mexico

The Golden Age of Mexican cinema is the name given to the period between 1935 and 1959 where the quality and economic success of the cinema of Mexico reached its peak....
-era films. The influence of Valdés is responsible for the assimilation of several Caló terms into Mexican slang.

The Mexican Nobel laureate
Nobel Prize in Literature

The Nobel Prize in Literature is awarded annually, since 1901, to an author from any country who has, in the words from the will of Alfred Nobel, produced "in the field of literature the most outstanding work in an ideal direction" ....
 Octavio Paz
Octavio Paz

Octavio Paz Lozano was a Mexican writer, poet, and diplomacy, and the winner of the 1990 Nobel Prize for Literature....
 writes in the essay, "The Pachuco and Other Extremes" that the Pachuco phenomenon paralleled the zazou
Zazou

The Zazous were a subculture in France after World War II. They were young people expressing their individuality by wearing big or garish clothing and dancing wildly to swing jazz and bebop....
 subculture in World War II-era Paris in style of clothing, music favored (jazz
Jazz

Jazz is a primarily American musical art form which originated at the beginning of the 20th century in African American communities in the Southern United States from a confluence of African and European music traditions....
, swing
Swing (genre)

Swing music, also known as swing jazz or simply swing, is a form of jazz music that developed in the early 1930s and had solidified as a distinctive style by 1935 in the United States....
, and jump blues
Jump blues

Jump blues is an up-tempo blues usually played by small groups and featuring horns. Jump blues was very popular in the 1940s and was called rock and roll in the 1950s....
), and attitudes, although there was no known link between the two subcultures.

The pachuco subculture declined in the 1960s, evolving into the Chicano
Chicano

Chicano is a word for a Mexican American . The terms Chicano and Chicana were originally used by and regarding U.S. citizens of Mexican descent....
 style. This style preserved some of the pachuco slang while adding a strong political element characteristic of the late 1960s in American life.

In the early 1970s, a recession and the increasingly violent nature of gang life resulted in an abandonment of anything that suggested dandyism. Accordingly, Mexican-American gangs adopted a uniform of T-shirts and khakis derived from prison uniforms, and the pachuco style died out. However, the zoot suit remains a popular choice of formal wear for urban and rural Latino youths in heavily ethnic neighborhoods. It is typically worn at a prom, or in some cases, at informal Latino university commencement ceremonies.

Pachucos called their slang Caló (sometimes called "pachuquismo"), a unique argot
Argot

Argot is a secret language used by various groups?including, but not limited to, thieves and other criminals?to prevent outsiders from understanding their conversations....
 that drew on the original Spanish Gypsy Caló, Mexican Spanish, the New Mexican dialect of Spanish, and American English, employing words and phrases creatively applied. To a large extent, Caló went mainstream and is one of the last surviving vestige of the Pachuco, often used in the lexicon of some urban Latino
Latino

The demonyms Latino and Latina , are defined in English language dictionaries as:* "a person of Latin-American or Spanish-speaking descent."...
s in the United States to this day.

The same word "pachuco" is used in Costa Rica to define Costa Rican slang. It nevertheless differs from the Mexican slang. In Costa Rica the term "pachuco" refers to a vulgar or indecent person.

La Pachuca

The "Pachuca", the female counterpart of the Pachuco, had as strong an aesthetic sensibility as the male zoot suiter. The Pachuca's hairstyle tended to be a high "coif" (a more pronounced version of the typical hair style of the time), sometimes using hair grease. Her makeup was heavy, particularly the lipstick. The preferred color of clothing was black. One very loud version of the Pachuca look entailed wearing the masculine zoot suit, albeit with modifications to fit the female form. This was very subversive at the time because of long-held gender role
Gender role

The set of perceived behavioral Norm associated particularly with males or females, in a given social group or system. It can be a form of division of labour by gender....
s that dictated how a person should dress. Another variation included full, knee-length skirts with the standard zoot suit finger-tip jacket. Sometimes, she donned the standard heavy gold pocket chain.

This style was associated with gang membership and activity. The idea of gang membership and gang activity came from the Zoot Suit Riots
Zoot Suit Riots

"Zoot Suit Riot" directs here. For the album by the Cherry Poppin' Daddies, see "Zoot Suit Riot ". For the song off the album, see "Zoot Suit Riot "...
 that took place mainly in Southern California
Southern California

Southern California, or So Cal, is defined as the southern portion of the U.S. state of California. Its population centers on the cities of Los Angeles, California, San Diego, California, San Bernardino, California, and Riverside, California....
. The negative image of the male zoot suiter as a "violent gangster" naturally extended to the Pachuca as well. The promiscuous image came from contravening the traditional "see and be seen" fashion aesthetic — the Pachuca's high public visibility during a time when the "good" [minority] woman belonged in the home was seen in a scandalous light.

The Pachuca's challenge to the dominant perception of femininity came during the period between the advent of women's suffrage
Women's suffrage

The term women's suffrage refers to the economic and political reform movement aimed at extending suffrage ? the right to vote ? to women. The movement's modern origins lie in France in the 18th century....
 in 1920 and the upsurge in feminist
Feminism

Feminism is the belief that women should have equal political, social, sexual, intellectual and economic rights to men. It involves various movements, Theory, and philosophies, all concerned with issues of gender difference, that advocate equality for women and that campaign for women's rights and interests....
 activism of the 1960s and 1970s.

See also

  • Cholo
    Cholo

    Cholo is a term that has been applied to individuals of mixed indigenous people of the Americas ancestry, or other racially mixed origin; its precise usage has varied widely in different times and places....
  • Vato
    Vato

    Vato may refer to:*...
  • Zoot Suit Riots
    Zoot Suit Riots

    "Zoot Suit Riot" directs here. For the album by the Cherry Poppin' Daddies, see "Zoot Suit Riot ". For the song off the album, see "Zoot Suit Riot "...
  • Sleepy Lagoon
    Sleepy Lagoon

    "Sleepy Lagoon" can refer to:*"Sleepy Lagoon ," a 1940 in music popular song by Sir Eric Coates and Jack Lawrence*Sleepy Lagoon , a 1943 in music movie...