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Sloanes are associated with being educated at top-tier [[private school]]s, known as [[Independent School (UK)|Public Schools]] in England.
Sloanes are associated with being educated at top-tier [[private school]]s, known as [[Independent School (UK)|Public Schools]] in England.


Young Sloanes aspire to attend the ancient universities of [[University of Oxford|Oxford]] and [[University of Cambridge|Cambridge]], or London University, which have a reputation for upper-class attendance. A number of other universities, however, have established reputations as havens for Sloanes, notably [[University of St Andrews|St Andrews]], [[University of Durham|Durham]],<ref name="Independent 19940102" /> [[University of Edinburgh|Edinburgh]], [[University of Exeter|Exeter]], [[Newcastle University|Newcastle]] and more recently [[University of Warwick|Warwick]].
Young Sloanes aspire to attend the ancient universities of [[University of Oxford|Oxford]] and [[University of Cambridge|Cambridge]], or London University, which have a reputation for upper-class attendance. A number of other universities, however, have established reputations as havens for Sloanes, notably [[University of St Andrews|St Andrews]], [[University of Durham|Durham]],<ref name="Independent 19940102" /> [[University of Edinburgh|Edinburgh]], [[University of Exeter|Exeter]],[[University of Bristol|Bristol]],[[Newcastle University|Newcastle]] and more recently [[University of Warwick|Warwick]].


Typically male Sloane careers include, banking, finance, the military, Chartered Surveyors or journalism. Women have often worked as secretaries or in fashion and retired when they had children.
Typically male Sloane careers include, banking, finance, the military, Chartered Surveyors or journalism. Women have often worked as secretaries or in fashion and retired when they had children.

Revision as of 00:20, 28 October 2013

The term Sloane Ranger (often shortened to Sloane or less frequently Sloanie) refers to a stereotype in the UK of young, upper class or upper-middle-class women, or men who share distinctive and common lifestyle traits. The term is a punning portmanteau of "Sloane Square", a location in Chelsea, London famed for the wealth of residents and frequenters, and the television Westerns character The Lone Ranger.

Initially the term "Sloane Ranger" was used mostly in reference to women, a particular archetype being Diana, Princess of Wales. However, the term now usually includes men. Male Sloanes have also been referred to as "Rahs" and "Hooray Henries".[1] The term Sloane Ranger has similar related terms in other countries: in France they are called 'BCBG' (bon chic, bon genre).

The Official Sloane Ranger Handbook

File:Sloane Ranger Handbook.jpg
Cover of The Official Sloane Ranger Handbook. Lady Diana Spencer is pictured in center.

Sloane Ranger, a commonplace term in 1980s London, was originally popularised by British writer Peter York and co-writer Ann Barr in The Official Sloane Ranger Handbook (1982) and its companion The Official Sloane Ranger Diary. The books were published by the British society-watcher magazine Harpers & Queen, for whom Peter York was Style Editor and "was responsible for identifying the cult phenomena of "Sloane Rangers" and "Foodies".[2]

The exemplar female Sloane Ranger was considered to be Lady Diana Spencer before marrying The Prince of Wales, when she was an aristocrat from the Spencer family. However, most Sloanes were not aristocrats as Lady Diana was. Considered typical of SRs was patriotism and traditionalism, and a belief in the values of upper-class and upper-middle-class culture, confidence in themselves and their given places in the world, a fondness for life in the countryside, country sports in particular, philistinism and anti-intellectualism. The title of the Sloane Ranger handbook lists the subheading "the problem of Hampstead", in reference to the stereotypical Sloane Ranger's supposed antipathy to the champagne socialist stereotype of the Hampstead liberal.

However, not all 1980s Sloanes liked country sports — Diana herself hated them, and not all were philistine anti-intellectuals. The reason why a proud philistinism is emphasised is twofold: SRs, with their SR-based self-confidence were supposedly unembarrassed to admit disliking ballet, opera, modern art, and James Joyce; most public intellectuals of the 1970s and the 1980s were left-wing degenerates, hence aligning with left-wing intelligentsia cultural values would be anathematic to staunchly Tory Sloanes. The typical male Sloane is satirised by the Harry Enfield character, Tim Nice-but-Dim.

Accent noticeably identified and separated the Sloane Ranger from the non-Sloane. Sloanes would share the same general accent traits whether they came from London, the Home Counties, Scotland, other parts of Britain, or even if educated abroad. Sloanes might use the same language as middle-class non-Sloanes, but would speak with a region-neutral accent and received pronunciation.

Sloane territory

Although Sloanes are nowadays supposedly more widely spread and amorphous than in the past, they are still perceived to socialise in the expensive areas of west London, most notably Kings Road,[3] Fulham Road, Kensington High Street, and other areas of Kensington, Chelsea and Fulham. The pubs and nightclubs in these areas are popular with Sloanes, [citation needed] in particular The White Horse pub, known as the "Sloaney Pony", in Fulham and the Admiral Codrington, known as "The Cod", in Chelsea.[3]

Sloanes are associated with being educated at top-tier private schools, known as Public Schools in England.

Young Sloanes aspire to attend the ancient universities of Oxford and Cambridge, or London University, which have a reputation for upper-class attendance. A number of other universities, however, have established reputations as havens for Sloanes, notably St Andrews, Durham,[3] Edinburgh, Exeter,Bristol,Newcastle and more recently Warwick.

Typically male Sloane careers include, banking, finance, the military, Chartered Surveyors or journalism. Women have often worked as secretaries or in fashion and retired when they had children.

Notable Sloanes

The following people have been considered as past and current Sloanes:

See also

References

  1. ^ "ON THE TRAIL OF LONDON'S SLOANE RANGERS". The New York Times. 25 March 1984.
  2. ^ "Harpers & Queen Timeline"[dead link], The National Magazine Company, 2006.
  3. ^ a b c Slot, Owen (2 January 1994). "Same Sloanes, new Range: Ten years after their handbook was a bestseller, Owen Slot finds Caroline and Henry are still doing OK, Yah". The Independent. Retrieved 20 December 2011.
  4. ^ a b Armstrong, Lisa (19 January 2007). "Just don't say yah... OK?". Times Newspapers Ltd. pp. Section 2 pp4-5. Retrieved 19 January 2006.
  5. ^ a b c "Sloane Rangers adapt to survive". Telegraph. 2007-10-18. Retrieved 2013-07-08.
  6. ^ "Hooray, Henry, the Sloane tribe is back". theage.com.au. 2002-10-07. Retrieved 2013-07-08.
  7. ^ a b www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-429997/The-Sloane-Ranger-rides-yah.html
  8. ^ "Kate Middleton and the rise of the Sloane Ranger". Telegraph. Retrieved 2013-07-08.
  9. ^ Mount, Harry (2010-05-23). "Sarah Ferguson: the Sloane that time forgot – Telegraph Blogs". Blogs.telegraph.co.uk. Retrieved 2013-07-08.