Beat Generation
Beat Generation
Beat Generation
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Kostas Myrsiades, ed., The Beat Generation: Critical Essays. New York: Peter
Lang, 2002. x + 352 pp. $29.95.
Jennie Skerl, ed., Reconstructing the Beats. New York: Palgrave-Macmillan, 2004.
241 pp. $24.95.
he Beat generation of writers sought literary achievement, but contemporary fashion, entertainment, and
opinion columnists granted them much more notice
than did literary critics. When Jack Kerouac, author of
On the Road (1957) and the unwitting Daddy of the Beatniks, died in
1969 with only one of his twenty-some books in print, the Beat generation seemed destined to fade away, maybe to be remembered
primarily as precursors to the politically engaged hippie movement. Time has proven otherwise. In the thirty years following
Kerouacs death, more than a dozen biographers have covered his
life, replacing the popular presss snapshots with deeply researched
tomes that depict a serious and dedicated writer at work. The other
major Beat writersAllen Ginsberg, Gregory Corso, and William
Burroughs, who all died in the past decadehave likewise had their
lives recorded by biographers. References to the Beat writers in popular songs, movies, and television shows constitute a further tribute
to their cultural relevance and to the popularity they maintain
with the public at large. As distance from the 1950s increased and
the 1960s counterculture bore fruit with solid social developments
in the 1970s and beyond, many social critics overhauled earlier
dismissals of the Beats significance. It is now clear that the Beats
Contemporary Literature XLV, 4
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Moriartys actions is that [w]e must focus our energies on obtaining our own kicks, and mustnt let any obligations to others get in
our way (83). The connection of nihilism to authenticity is unclear.
Nancy M. Graces A White Man in Love: A Study of Race,
Gender, Class, and Ethnicity in Jack Kerouacs Maggie Cassidy, The
Subterraneans, and Tristessa completes the thorough textual analysis that Wilsons essay points toward. Graces essay, an effective
combination of biographical and literary analysis, opens up new
areas that will assuredly engage todays students. Drawing deeply
from Graces ideas, I recently taught Maggie Cassidy to a graduate
class with excellent results. Grace considers Kerouacs contrasts of
the White American Woman, who embodies a wholesome, nonsexual morality, the primitive fellaheen woman who, for Kerouac,
personifies earthiness and sexuality, and, finally, the grotesque,
identified with the despised, exoticized, irregular, and incomplete (96). As does Wilson, Grace contends that it is simply too
easy to label [Kerouac] racist and misogynist (97), and she seeks
to recover Kerouacs image by complicating the readings of what
she calls ficto-autobiography, particularly the works in which
Kerouac dealt most directly with his relationships with women.
Graces treatment of the high-school track-meet scene and the ensuing scenes in Maggie Cassidy is the highlight of her essay and one of
the brightest moments in the volume. Graces careful research,
including the Lowell Sun sports pages, and her close reading of the
text provide an insightful look into Kerouacs method of constructing ficto-autobiography. According to Grace, Kerouac did not
compete against a black athlete when he won the thirty-yard dash
against Worcester North in January 1939. Instead, a black runner
defeated Kerouac easily in an earlier meet; Kerouac conflated the
two events to transform his defeat by an African-American into a
victory signifying personal and cultural aggrandizement (101).
Grace goes on to explore the complications of masculine whiteness
that Kerouac critiques. Kerouac leaves the whiteness of Maggies
hometown to pursue the dark woman of his dreams (Mardou in The
Subterraneans and Tristessa), someone who seems wholly other but
with whom he may bond and transform himself. Grace concludes
that although the narrators fail to find lasting love, they benefit by
the experience and are able to create literary art.
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Douglas G. Baldwins Word Begets Image and Image Is Virus: Undermining Language and Film in the Works of William S.
Burroughs is impressively multidisciplinary in scope: with thirtytwo endnotes and fifty-three cited works, Baldwins apparatus
nearly equals the length of his article. The effort pays off, though, as
Baldwin details Burroughss ambivalent response to film and television and the postmodern influences in his work. Terence Diggory
continues his fine work on urban pastoral themes in Allen
Ginsbergs Urban Pastoral, conceiving Ginsberg as a city hermit.
Jaap van der Bent focuses on Ginsbergs 1957 visit to Amsterdam,
where the poet met Dutch writers Simon Vinkenoog and Adriaan
Morrin; van der Bent contends that Ginsberg influenced
Vinkenoogs work and Dutch literature in general. And he mentions German writer Rolf Dieter Brinkmann, who is dealt with in
more detail in Anthony Waine and Jonathan Wooleys essay. Waine
and Wooley examine the ways in which certain German writers
were influenced by father figures who acted like adolescents.
Jennie Skerl divides Reconstructing the Beats into three categories:
Re-historicizing, Recovering, and Re-visioning. This collection of essays examines Beat works from contemporary critical, theoretical, historical, and interdisciplinary perspectives. In a 2002
review of Beat studies, Nancy M. Grace speculates that easy sales of
Beat criticism can lure publishers into not bothering with polished
scholarship. She complains that while the common thread connecting [Beat] practitioners, the melding of life and art, calls for
interdisciplinary approaches, readers are too often given scholarship that suffers from lack of a sustained and genuine interdisciplinary method, that is, scholarship that combines both the perspectives
and methods of two or more disciplines to solve problems or answer
questions that are beyond the scope of a single discipline.1 The
essayists in Skerls collection generally apply such interdisciplinary
methods, as evidenced by the wide-ranging, eclectic list of cumulative works cited. While Myrsiadess collection concerns itself primarily with textual analysis, Skerls book investigates more deeply
1. Nancy M. Grace, Seeking the Spirit of Beat: The Call for Interdisciplinary
Scholarship, Contemporary Literature 43 (2002): 820.
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Beats coped with male dominance of the movement while producing their own literature. Kygers journals reveal how her husband,
Gary Snyder, and Allen Ginsberg soaked up the adoration of their
audiences while Kyger herself pursued a less ego-centered trajectory. Ronna C. Johnson discusses the work of Lenore Kandel,
a poet who achieved notoriety for her 1966 publication of The Love
Book and was the only woman to speak from the Be-In stage in 1967,
with Ginsberg, Snyder, and Michael McClure. Johnson explores the
difficulties faced by women who were treated differently and
whose works were received differently from those of the male Beat
writers. Kandel herself, who once disavowed connection with the
Beats, further complicates the situation. She told Bruce Cook,
I think the idea of a community of artists is appalling. You dont
have communities of plumbers or painters, so why should you
have a community of poets?2 The definition of Beat generation
has always been hazy and unstable, yet as these scholars show, one
does not have to be a bona fide member of a group to respond to the
same cultural pressures or share a common poetics. As Friedman
states, and as these essays prove, The women writers of the Beat
Generation have moved beyond existing as a subset within Beat
Generation studies (87). This contention is reinforced by the recent
publication of Breaking the Rule of Cool: Interviewing and Reading
Women Beat Writers, edited by Grace and Johnson. One question
invariably pops up in each of the interviews: how do you define the
Beat generation? The various answers are enlightening for their
scope and insight into each womans particular perspective. The
Beat generation has long been seen as a boy gang, adventurous,
romantic types who see women as sex objects, or sullen homosexuals who abhor women generally. In fact, most of the groundbreaking work in Beat studies has been done by women, and gradually
the women Beats themselves are being treated to full critical
scrutiny.
Skerls final section, Re-visioning, contains essays that in one
way or another seek to reconfigure aspects of the heretofore best
known Beat writers, Kerouac, Ginsberg, and Burroughs. Despite
2. Qtd. in Bruce Cook, The Beat Generation (New York: Scribner, 1971) 210.
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