This was the first time that mainstream America had come across a subculture that perceived and thought differently than the average American. Whereas before, underground movements were hidden to keep the ire of mainstream society at bay, flashy suits drew other groups out in the forefront of mainstream society. From the forties onward, subcultures would become more visible with flashy youth culture in the fifties, the hippie movement of the sixties and so on. The war years witnessed a drawback in fashion when it came to supporting the war, but many people outside the mainstream fabric of American society chose flashy suits to express themselves regardless of society’s disapproval. At a time where discrimination was rampant, ethnic groups such as African Americans, Hispanics and some Asian groups saw flashy suits as a form belonging and having some measure of power in their own lives. The people who were brave enough to sport such flashy suits should be commended at a time when anything that defied conformity and sacrifice became frowned upon.
Flashy suits can be seen today in many music groups and even subcultures such as the Japanese mafia who regularly flaunt flashy suits to show their status and sense of belonging to the organized crime world. If you ever go to Japan and spot a young man sporting a flashy suit then odds are you are looking at a yakuza foot soldier.
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