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The Official Preppy Handbook

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Illustrator
  
Oliver Williams

Language
  
English

Media type
  
Paperback book

LC Class
  
LC58.7.O35 1980

Editor
  
Lisa Birnbach

4.2/5
Goodreads

Country
  
United States

Publication date
  
October 1980

Originally published
  
October 1980

Page count
  
224

The Official Preppy Handbook httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenaa6Off

Subject
  
Humor Secondary education

Authors
  
Lisa Birnbach, Mason Wiley, Jonathan Roberts

Publisher
  
Workman Publishing Company

Similar
  
True Prep: It's a Whole New Old, Take Ivy, Preppy: Cultivating Ivy Style, The official Sloane Ranger h, The cheese monkeys

The Official Preppy Handbook (1980) is a tongue-in-cheek humor reference guide edited by Lisa Birnbach, written by Jonathan Roberts, Carol McD. Wallace, Mason Wiley, and Birnbach. It discusses an aspect of North American culture described as prepdom. In addition to insights on prep school and university life at socially acceptable schools, it illuminates many aspects of the conservative upper middle class, old money WASP society. Topics range from appropriate clothing for social events to choosing the correct college and major.

Contents

The book addresses "preppy" life from birth to old age, lending understanding to the cultural aspects of "preppy" life. In general, elementary and secondary school, college, and the young adult years receive the most attention. Coverage lessens during the book's latter chapters.The book was first published in 1980 by Workman Publishing.

The Official Preppy Handbook explains and satirizes what it takes to be a preppy person in the 1980s, parodying the lifestyle of the WASP elite. Lisa Birnbach reveals through an ironic tone where preps go to school, where they summer, what brands they wear, and how they decorate their homes. Birnbach divides The Official Preppy Handbook into 7 sections, each devoted to a different period of the preppy lifestyle. The Handbook begins by caricaturizing the childhood of a preppy person in 1980. Lisa Birnbach satirizes a prep’s ideal family lifestyle, and humorously advises readers how to pick, interview, and gain acceptance into a prep school. The book then wittily discusses “the best years of your life”- a prep’s college years. With tongue in cheek, Birnbach elucidates which college courses to take, how to design one’s dorm room, and how to party at college. In Chapters 5 and 6, the book ironically explains the prep adult life as first a “young executive”, and later as a retired adult in “the Country Club Years”. Birnbach jokingly educates readers on navigating a cocktail party, networking, and vacationing. The Official Preppy Handbook also teaches readers how to dress preppy. In chapter 4, Birnbach emphasizes the importance of appearing effortless, preppy and casual, writing, “socks are frequently not worn on sporting occasions or on social occasions for that matter. This provides a year round beachside look that is so desirable that comfort may be thrown aside”. By teaching readers on where to shop, what to wear, and “the merits of pink and green”, Birnbach makes preppy culture attainable to anyone – contrary to the popular belief that one needs to be born into a preppy lifestyle, she makes prepdom something anyone can cultivate.

Lagoon the official preppy handbook


Effect

The book's reflections on young urban professional culture inspired Arthur Cinader, the founder of the J. Crew clothing line. Cinader hoped to capitalize on the book's success.

The book also represented a resurgence of interest in preppy culture that aided the growth of retailer L.L. Bean, which the book describes as "nothing less than Prep mecca." The book's exposé of university life and the drug and sex culture at various schools had a significant impact on public thought about those schools. The book spawned many other "official" handbooks for other American subcultures.

Lastly, Lisa Birnbach’s The Official Preppy Handbook was important in the 1980s because it helped reveal the inner details of the elite preppy culture to the masses, and helped to democratize the preppy subculture. Prior to the book, primarily only wealthy, WASP elites adopted the preppy subculture. From the 1920s, WASPs dominated American universities, and preppy fashion was traditionally worn on university campuses. However, as universities became less exclusive as a result of economic, and cultural shifts in history, preppiness as a subculture became less exclusive. Preppy fashion adopted new nuances, and preppy culture has become more inclusive. By writing The Official Preppy Handbook, Lisa Birnbach helps to further democratize preppy fashion and culture. As Birnbach explains in her introduction, the handbook is not an exclusive text describing preppiness as subculture reserved for “an elite minority lucky enough to attend prestigious private schools”. Rather, the Handbook was written as a guidepost for the revival of the preppy style. It shared the secrets of the preppy code, making preppy seem “neat, attractive, and suddenly attainable”. The book even provides instructions on where to shop. With satire and cheek, The Official Preppy Handbook showed that one did not need to be a WASP to be a preppy because “in a true democracy everyone can be upper class and live in Connecticut. It’s only fair. The Official Preppy Handbook will help you get there”.

References

The Official Preppy Handbook Wikipedia