Hungries were more into India than the outside world like the Beats
The Beats were, in many ways, an international literary movement. Although in defining the Beat Generation, we tend to look at a core of three writers, expanding out to include others like Gregory Corso and “second generation Beats” like Diane di Prima, and they are all American. Sure, there were British artists inspired by the Beats, and India’s Hungry Generation,
and all across the world youths writing poetry like Ginsberg… but in
the end, the Beat Generation was an American movement. Only it wasn’t
purely American: it was a bunch of Americans inspired by the outside
world.
The Beats looked out from Post-War America at a big wide world and they took influence from it and sought refuge in it. Although the Beat Generation eventually spread their own gospel to the world, with kids reading Kerouac even as far away as China, initially it was the world that inspired these young writers. From Europe the Romantic poets and Renaissance artists provided inspiration, and from Asia came ancient and mysterious wisdom. Eventually, when curiosity drove the Beats to explore, they looked back upon their homeland with eyes now fully open. It gave them a valuable new perspective on America. For more on this topic, see John Tytell’s Beat Transnationalism.
Allen Ginsberg was by far the best-travelled of the Beats, visiting more than sixty countries, yet he was not the first to take off for parts unknown. In fact, his later world wanderings were heavily influenced by his older friends. William S. Burroughs and Lawrence Ferlinghetti had seen much of the world a decade both Allen ever set off. Somehow, Jack Kerouac became the symbol for youthful wanderlust, although his journeys were never as extensive as the others, and in fact he often got homesick. Gregory Corso, Alan Ansen, Ted Joans, Amiri Baraka, Joanne Kyger… for all of them, travel was incredibly significant.
Let’s take a look at some important travel destinations for the Beat Generation:
The Beats looked out from Post-War America at a big wide world and they took influence from it and sought refuge in it. Although the Beat Generation eventually spread their own gospel to the world, with kids reading Kerouac even as far away as China, initially it was the world that inspired these young writers. From Europe the Romantic poets and Renaissance artists provided inspiration, and from Asia came ancient and mysterious wisdom. Eventually, when curiosity drove the Beats to explore, they looked back upon their homeland with eyes now fully open. It gave them a valuable new perspective on America. For more on this topic, see John Tytell’s Beat Transnationalism.
Allen Ginsberg was by far the best-travelled of the Beats, visiting more than sixty countries, yet he was not the first to take off for parts unknown. In fact, his later world wanderings were heavily influenced by his older friends. William S. Burroughs and Lawrence Ferlinghetti had seen much of the world a decade both Allen ever set off. Somehow, Jack Kerouac became the symbol for youthful wanderlust, although his journeys were never as extensive as the others, and in fact he often got homesick. Gregory Corso, Alan Ansen, Ted Joans, Amiri Baraka, Joanne Kyger… for all of them, travel was incredibly significant.
Let’s take a look at some important travel destinations for the Beat Generation:
Comments
Post a Comment