265
See also: The Red Room 185 ■ The Catcher in the Rye 256–57 ■ Howl and Other Poems 288 ■ Fear and Loathing in Las
Vegas 332
POSTWAR WRITING
The term “beat” simultaneously
held notions of being “beatific”; of
being “beaten” by the punishing
intensity of a hobo existence; and
of a life lived to a jazz “beat.” In the
1950s, tales of the beat movement’s
free lifestyle and reckless ways
shocked mainstream society, and
their writings signaled a radical
reinvigoration of American literature.
The appearance of Jack Kerouac’s
novel, On the Road, in 1957 framed
him as the leading beat novelist.
On the Road details a series of
journeys that Kerouac took between
1947 and 1950. In the book they are
narrated by Sal Paradise (identified
with Kerouac himself) who is often
accompanied on his travels by
Dean Moriarty (the writer Neal
Cassady). A number of other beat
generation writers also appear in
the book, disguised by name only,
such as Allen Ginsberg (“Carlo
Marx”) and William S. Burroughs
(“Old Bull Lee”).
The book has five parts. The
first sees Sal Paradise setting off
for San Francisco in July 1947. Sal
meets Dean Moriarty and the two
launch on a riotous road trip,
hitchhiking and taking buses on
a meandering adventure: partying,
meeting friends, and looking for
girls before finally returning to
New York. The subsequent parts
tell of a series of hedonistic charges
through North America.
Spontaneous prose
The narrative form of On the Road,
which Kerouac referred to as
“spontaneous prose,” was inspired
by an 18-page typed letter that
he received in December 1950
from his friend Neal Cassady.
According to Kerouac, the key to
the prose was to write swiftly and
“without consciousness,” in a
semitrance, allowing the mind to
flow freely, associating sights,
sounds, and senses in a narrative of
absolute immediacy. For example,
as Sal and Dean reach Chicago,
Kerouac writes “Screeching
trolleys, newsboys, gals cutting by,
the smell of fried food and beer in
the air, neons winking—‘We’re in
the big town, Sal! Whooee!’” The
long, fluid, descriptive sentences
and stream-of-consciousness style
mirrored the intensive pace of Sal’s
alcohol-infused, vagrant existence,
while imitating the improvisational
character of jazz music. Kerouac
wrote On the Road in a frenetic
three-week period in April 1951,
fueled by caffeine and drugs.
The result was a manuscript in
wildly creative, original prose—
or “spontaneous bop prosody,” as
Ginsberg called it—that came to
define the beat generation. ■
Jack Kerouac Jack Kerouac was born to French-
Canadian parents in Lowell,
Massachusetts, in 1922. He
studied at Columbia University
where he met Allen Ginsberg,
Neal Cassady, and William S.
Burroughs who would become
fellow leading lights of the beat
generation. Kerouac dropped out
in his second year then joined the
merchant navy, before turning to
writing as a profession. From
1947, he became increasingly
attracted to the whisky-drinking
hobo lifestyle and began his
wandering across America and
Mexico, often visiting various
other beat writers. Those
voyages across the North
American landscape were
relayed in his various roman à
clef writings, friends’ faces only
thinly veiled as protagonists.
Kerouac’s alcoholism led to
cirrhosis and his death in 1969.
Other key works
1950 The Town and the City
1957 On the Road
1958 The Subterraneans
1958 The Dharma Bums
1972 Visions of Cody (published
posthumously)
Kerouac typed On the Road onto
rolls of tracing paper that he had glued
together to avoid having to change
paper and interrupt his creative flow.
The final manuscript was 120-foot long.
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