Berkeley, 1989: IĢżattended aĢżlecture about Jack Kerouac, who in his novel On the Road (1957) drove āto evade zones of supervisionā. AĢżstudent raised his hand: āProfessor, six years ago, IĢżread On the Road in class; IĢżdropped out, and travelled back and forth cross countryā¦ā
Does the Beat generation ā its outsider lifestyle and literature ā still provoke and inspire us today? Allen Ginsbergās poem Howl boasts of being āexpelled from the academies for crazy & publishing obscene odes on the windows of the skullā. But after six decades of mastication by scholars, have the Beats become, like a professorās grey goatee and ponytail, relics of another era? As the Berkeley student concluded, āNow Iāve come back, and IĢżcan tell you, it was allĢżshit.ā
Two recent scholastic books may supply answers. The first is The Best Minds of My Generation: AĢżLiterary History of the Beats (2017), Ginsbergās transcribed lectures from his āJack Kerouac School of Disembodied Poeticsā programme at Naropa University in Colorado. Here you get your Beat hagiography served straight up, with a chaser of Beat poetics and pedagogy, gossip about Jack and friends, Zen aphorisms and stoner wisdom.
A more grounded, well-researched study, making cooler judgements, is Steven Bellettoās °Õ³ó±šĢżµž±š²¹³Ł²õ. Here you can trace the roots of early 1950s Beat culture in New York and San Francisco; how the ābig threeā of William Burroughs, Kerouac and the whirling, ever-promotional Ginsberg devised, publicised and defended their breakthrough works; how theĢżEstablishment intelligentsia discredited them as slacker Beatniks; and how the Beat posture of Zen disengagement later joined the anti-war movement and tried to levitate the Pentagon.
Āé¶¹
Belletto, editor of The Cambridge Companion to the Beats (2017), is brimming with detail and anecdote. Extensively explored are the role of little magazines and mimeographs, bookshops and bars, legal battles and personal disputes; little-known poets and hangers-on; and the widening of BeatĢżLit as it engaged feminism, race issues, Squares and nitpicking New Critics, who disliked the āloose and undiscriminatingā Beat poetics. For Belletto, the Beats are a coterie of writers venturing outside the dominant culture, finding new, appetitive ways of living ā drink, drug, sex, all crazed and goofy, all ecstatic impulse ā and then fashioning this material into wild myths about their lives and their legendary friends.
But a problem for this admirably comprehensive book is that much of Beat writing sounds dated and tinny. āLike man donāt flip, Iām hip you cooled/this sceneā (Diane diĢżPrima). Belletto calls these lines a self-reflexive performance of slang. We might also describe them as: not engaging; not groovy; not good. And Beat outsider art can depend ā drearily ā on insider references: Philip Whalen records himself drunk and āroaring, āGone, everything goneāā to āThe Messers. Ginsberg & Kerouac, also juicedā. Belletto avoids oft-told tales of bed and bongo: Burroughs killing his wife in what he initially claimed was a drunken William Tell game merits but one paragraph. Still, he might have addressed the Freudian puzzle: how did Kerouacās living with his mother affect his āspontaneous proseā?
Āé¶¹
Ginsbergās book believes the Beat party never ended; Bellettoās book offers a morning-after accounting of what the Beats said and did.
David Gewanter is professor of English at Georgetown University. His latest book of poems is Fort Necessity (2018).
The Beats: A Literary History
By Steven Belletto
Cambridge University Press, 476pp, £26.99
ISBN 9781316817179
Published 11 March 2020
POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline:ĢżMorning after a night on the road
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