The Beat Generation di Loredana Di Francesco

KEROUAC: the king of the Beat

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"Let's go.
Where are we going, man?

I don't know, but we gotta go".
On the Road

Bio Kerouac
Biographic infos

Jack Kerouac [I1] [ES1]
defined himself  "the King of the Beat": he was born in Lowell, Massachussetts, in 1922, of French-Canadian parents.His first language was a French dialect and his first never-forgotten name was 'Ti Jean (Petit Jean). His childhood was typical of a standard American boy and he sought some sort of evasion from his hard-working middle-class milieu in day-dreams about becoming a football champion or a great writer. He entered Columbia University, but abandoned the studies after one year and went back to his home; he tried several manual jobs, moved restlessly from town to town and was in the Navy for a small period.
In 1943 he went to New York and joined some young people who, like him, rebelled against the middle-class way of life.
In 1944 he made the acquaintance of Allen Ginsberg, who was to influence and remained on of his true friends in the course of his life. Another important meeting for Kerouac was Neal Cassady 's: Neal's spontaneity, love for adventure, untamed spirit, made him a kind of hero in Jack's eyes, who idealized his new friend and portrayed him in his best known novel as "Dean Moriarty".
In 1947 Kerouac hitch-hiked around the States, which provided him material for his later writings. In that year his first novel, The Town and the City, was rejected by two publishers.
In 1948 he began to work at On the Road [ES1] ; his restlessness led him to change his residence continually: first he lived with his family, then with friends in San Francisco and  New York.
In 1950,  when The Town and the City was published, Kerouac was busy working at On the Road, to which he devoted himself with ardour, trying to convey the spirit of the adventures that make up the book. Once again Neal Cassady's influence proved very important: Kerouac found in his friend's endless letters the spontaneity and the "rhythn" that he considered appropriate for his book.
As soon as the book was finished, in 1951, the author resumed his restless moving from place to place, joining various friends. He suffered of depression, too, owing to his constant financial difficulties (On the Road was rejected  by various publishers) and became more and more dependent on alcohol. In this bad period, he found comfort in the study of Buddhism and in meditation: the novel The Dharma Bums (1958) reflects his interest in Oriental philosophy.
In 1955 Kerouac obtained a contract with a publisher and consented to the publication passages from On the Road in magazines. In 1956, he moved to San Francisco and lived  with Allen Ginsberg, Cassady and Gregory Corso for a while.
The publication of On the Road  in 1957 marked the beginning of his success: the book became a best seller.
The Subterraneans and The Dharma Bums were published in 1958, and between 1959 and 1960 came out  other three novels: Maggie Cassidy, Visions of Cody and Tristessa.
From then on, Kerouac was faced with the difficult side of popularity: radio and TV interviews, newspaper reports, administering money, were too much for him. He drank more and more and suffered from hallucinations; he decided to return to live with his mother. The book Big Sur (1962) contains the account of his despair and the break down of all his hopes.
His last novel, Pic, was finished shortly before his death, and published posthumously in 1971.
Kerouac died, in 1969, at the age of 47, of a haemorrhage caused by drinking and drug abuse. He was the most outstanding personality of the Beat Generation, a group of writers with whom he shared the rejection of the way of life of the Establishment and the longing for freedom from all kinds of constrictions.


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