The Young Idea is a phrase used to describe youth. The term is often used in literature, music, films, TV, radio, and other media. The best-known use is for the title of a play by Noël Coward.
Origin and use
The phrase comes from the poem "Spring", written by the Scottish author James Thomson in 1728, one of a series of four poems titled The Seasons. The poem focuses on the arrival of spring, and uses personification to bring the natural world to life. It contains the lines:
The word idea comes from Greek idea "form, pattern", and The American Encyclopaedic Dictionary (1894) gives "To teach the young idea how to shoot" as an example for the word "shoot", meaning "To make progress; to advance"; so the phrase "To teach the young idea how to shoot" describes the forming and training of the young.
Charles Dickens refers to the phrase in jest when Pip relates that Mrs. Pocket:
However, the meaning gradually broadened in scope, "the young idea" referring generally to the world of young people and the way they saw things, until it meant no more than "children", "young people", "youth" or "young". For example:
Examples
Written works
- The Young Idea: A Sketch for "Old Boys" by One of Them (1884), novel by James Franklin Fuller
- The Young Idea (1888), children's monthly magazine edited and published by Cora Scott Pope
- "The Young Idea" Or, Common School Culture (1888), book about teaching by Caroline Bigelow Le Row
- The Young Idea: A Comedy of Environment (1910), novel by Frank Swinnerton
- The Young Idea : A Neighborhood Chronicle (1911), novel by Parker H. Fillmore
- The Young Idea: An Anthology of Opinion Concerning the Spirit and Aims of Contemporary American Literature (1917), anthology edited by Lloyd R. Morris
- The Young Idea (1956), publication by educationalist Josephine Macalister Brew
- About The Young Idea: The Story of The Jam 1972 â 1982 (1984), book by Mike Nicholls
Plays
Films
TV and Radio
Music
Exhibitions
Journalism
- "The Young Idea in Architecture" (1932), review by M. S. Briggs in The Burlington Magazine of the book The New Style: Architecture and Decorative Design by Maurice Casteels
- "Young Idea", pages in British Vogue championing up-and-coming innovative young designers
References