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1-18 of 18 Search Results for
kerouac
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Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1974) 73 (4): 428–444.
Published: 01 October 1974
... fiction in the early pages of Jack Kerouac s Dharma Bums and journalistically rendered in Jane Kramer s Allen Ginsberg in America, had an audience including Kerouac, Gary Snyder, Law rence Ferlinghetti, and Kenneth Rexroth. Surely the Beat Genera tion had undeniably appeared, and what could have been...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1994) 93 (3): 603–629.
Published: 01 July 1994
... of what Milwaukee s Archbishop Rembert Weakland has called the lost generation of American Catholics, this necessarily ll have to be about myself (to quote Jack Kerouac, the patron saint of so many of us). I am a late product of Irish-American ghetto Catholicism, a term banned by scholars at least...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1964) 63 (4): 601–604.
Published: 01 October 1964
... and Humanities Departments at the Carnegie Institute of Tech nology discuss six modem novelists: Henry James, Thomas Wolfe, David Michael Jones, William Golding, J. D. Salinger, and Jack Kerouac. Not offered as specialized scholarly studies but as critical commentaries designed to illuminate authors...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1994) 93 (2): 507–511.
Published: 01 April 1994
... 1994. Copyright © 1994 by Duke University Press, ccc 0038-2876/9450. 508 ThomasJ. Ferraro ogy continued with the writers upon whom Miller, as Celine s most effective transmitter, was most influential: the West-looking Beats of the 1950s, especially Ginsberg and Kerouac, and the young Mailer...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1963) 62 (4): 621.
Published: 01 October 1963
... on a weaker writer Jack Kerouac. The stronger articles are by the more mature scholars, usually, with one of the soundest by Richard P. Adams. And the most imaginative essay is by an author creative in his own right, associate editor William E. Taylor, who shades slightly the other creative contributor...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1984) 83 (3): 351–352.
Published: 01 July 1984
... and Jack Kerouac, Mark Twain and John Barth. In addition, he establishes solid affinities between such proponents of confidence and selfreliance as Emerson, Whitman, and William James and such dubious enter prisers as P. T. Barnum and Yellow Kid Weil. Lindberg also shows the transformations...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1994) 93 (2): 199–204.
Published: 01 April 1994
... into the 1960s. Back from a decade spent in France, Miller passed his gratitude to Celine on to the Beat movement at a time when his own American star was rising. Through figures like Jack Kerouac, Kenneth Rexroth, William S. Burroughs, and Allen Ginsberg, Celine is tied to a vibrant postwar American avant-garde...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1973) 72 (1): 143–148.
Published: 01 January 1973
... Atlantic Quarterly one believes faces must be carved on the scale of Mount Rushmore to have artistic merit. Truman Capote showed a typical storywriter s love for essentials when he said of Jack Kerouac s style, That s not writing; it s typing. Brief style goes with taut form, which goes with intense...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1994) 93 (2): 279–294.
Published: 01 April 1994
... linghetti, Jack Kerouac, William Burroughs, and Henry Miller, Gins berg said that it is the rapidity of transitions and shiftings made pos sible by [Celine s] 3-dot syntax that s what impresses us in [the] US who are interested in the use of aural speech patterns trans ferred to written language...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1994) 93 (2): 205–224.
Published: 01 April 1994
... scoundrel who could deploy his own history to convey 210 Morris Dickstein his mordant, ribald sense of life. (Jack Kerouac, on the other hand, would later use Celine s work as one model for his autobiographical chronicles without creating a strong central character, instead pro jecting the colorful...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1963) 62 (3): 365–376.
Published: 01 July 1963
... as stupidity s reward for conforming. So far, none of our more advanced American writers, our Ferlinghettis or Kerouacs, would seem to be a candidate for crosses of honor or Congressional Medals. Allowing for considerable pos ing and posturing, these poets and those generally of the beat generation...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1974) 73 (2): 160–172.
Published: 01 April 1974
...-faced motorcyclist, a pose which suggests his kinship with the disaffiliated everywhere, but also his membership in such curiously well-organized groups of alienated beings. Dylan here is a latter-day incarnation, not of Jimmy Dean, but of Dean Moriarty, the beat culture hero of Jack Kerouac s novel...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1986) 85 (3): 239–251.
Published: 01 July 1986
.... A substantial number of figures from the age of the electronic media, Kerouac for example, have been famous in ways that owe nothing to television. And the patterns of literary celebrity now are not much different from those earlier in the century. In fact, our literature has created for us myths of alienation...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1991) 90 (4): 785–801.
Published: 01 October 1991
... s nightmare, a road to nowhere dotted with signs pointing only at each other. Endlessly traveling, never arriving, she and we who accom pany her as her audience is a Kerouac who has mistaken a treadmill for the road, a Huckleberry Finn lighting out for territories he will never find. The following...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1977) 76 (4): 550–568.
Published: 01 October 1977
... to shift; the reason was race, which in America has generally been more consequential than class. The shift could be detected not only in Mailer s essay but in the fiction of Jack Kerouac, himself a con ventional patriot, but also the author of reveries like At lilac eve ning I walked with every muscle...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1975) 74 (3): 289–307.
Published: 01 July 1975
... Kerouac, himself a con ventional patriot, but also the author of reveries like At lilac eve ning I walked with every muscle aching among the lights of 27th and Welton in the Denver colored section, wishing I were a Negro, feeling that the best the white world had offered was not enough ecstasy for me...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1994) 93 (2): 421–443.
Published: 01 April 1994
... States, the self-novel gave new life to the autobiographical tradition in American fiction; not surprisingly, among the American writers who ve acknowledged Celine's influence is a group known precisely for such innovations: Miller, of course, but also Jack Kerouac, Joseph Heller, and more recently...
Journal Article
South Atlantic Quarterly (1994) 93 (2): 445–468.
Published: 01 April 1994
...: I think somebody brought this up the other day, that what Celine is doing may be related to speech, but even more important to me, in any case, is that it s related to the process of thought. And while Ginsberg and Kerouac may have been influenced by Celine in the oral side of their work, 1...