middlebrow
English
editAlternative forms
editEtymology
editFrom middle + brow, by analogy with highbrow and lowbrow. The term first appeared in Punch (1925) and was later used by Virginia Woolf (1930s) in an unsent letter to the New Statesman, published as a chapter in the book The Death of a Moth and Other Essays (1942).
Adjective
editmiddlebrow (not comparable)
- (derogatory) Neither highbrow or lowbrow, but somewhere in between.
- 2000 September 21, Hal Foster, “Slumming with Rappers at the Roxy”, in London Review of Books[1], volume 22, number 18, →ISSN:
- What does a Princeton graduate whose old dream it was to write for the New Yorker do when that dream comes true, only to discover that his cherished magazine is no longer the middlebrow arbiter of high culture of his imagining, but just another media outlet frantic for its market share of mass culture?
- 2017 September 29, “Winnie-the-Pooh brought joy to readers, but misery to the Milnes”, in The Economist[2]:
- As in so many middlebrow period dramas, the vintage cars are too shiny, the clothes too smart, the upper-class accents too strained and the dialogue too contrived. However dark the plot becomes, the sun keeps shining brightly through the trees.
- 2018 August 26, Jesse Green, “Neil Simon Drew Big Laughs, Then Came a Cultural Shift”, in The New York Times[3]:
- In the late ’60s and early ’70s, as independent films were diversifying their outlook and shaking off the formulas of Hollywood storytelling, Broadway boulevard comedies like “Last of the Red Hot Lovers” and “California Suite” — tales of the befuddled nouveau riche in a new world — began to look mass-produced and middlebrow.
Usage notes
edit- Generally pejorative, implying pretension and vulgarity, aspiring and appropriating high culture, but not appreciating it. On occasion, instead used positively.
Translations
editneither highbrow or lowbrow
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Noun
editmiddlebrow (plural middlebrows)
Translations
editperson or thing neither highbrow or lowbrow
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See also
editReferences
edit- ESC, 2003. Re:highbrow, middlebrow, lowbrow, The Phrase finder.
- Robert Hendrickson, 1997. Encyclopedia of Word and Phrase Origins (New York: Facts on File)
Further reading
edit- middlebrow on Wikipedia.Wikipedia