Sunday, November 30, 2008

Jack Kerouac


American novelist and poet, leading figure and spokesman of the Beat Generation. Kerouac's search for spiritual liberation produced his best known work, the autobiographical novel ON THE ROAD (1957). The first beat novel was based on Kerouac's travels across America with his friend Neal Cassidy. Its importance was compared to Hemingway's novel The Sun Also Rises, generally seen as the testament of the "Lost Generation" of the 1920s.

"I stuck my head out of the window and took deep breaths of the fragrant air. It was the most beautiful of all moments. The madman was a brakeman with the Southern Pacific and he lived in Fresno; his father was also a brakeman. He lost his toe in the Oakland yards, switching, I didn't quite understand how. He drove me into buzzing Fresno and let me off by the south side of town. I went for a quick Coke in a little grocery by the tracks, and here came a melancholy Armenian youth along the red boxcars, and just at that moment locomotive howled, and I said to myself, Yes, yes, Saroyan town." (from On the Road)

Jack Kerouac was born in Lowell, Massachusetts, the third child of working-class French-Canadian èmigrés. His father, Leo, owned a print shop - he died of stomach cancer in 1946. Kerouac learned English as a second language, and first the French-Canadian dialect joual. When he was four, his beloved older brother Gerard died. Kerouac believed that Gerard followed him as a guardian angel. Kerouac went to parochial school where he was educated by Jesuits. In high school he was a star athlete. In 1939 he entered Columbia University on a football scholarship, but soon dropped out. He joined the navy and was discharged during World War II on psychiatric grounds. Kerouac served as a merchant seaman and roamed United States and Mexico. During this period he wrote the unpublished The Sea Is My Brother. His first novel, THE TOWN AND THE CITY, appeared in 1950. The account of the decline of his own family received good critics but Kerouac judged the novel as a failure.

While hanging around Columbia campus in 1944, Kerouac began to mix with a group of New York based intellectuals including William Burroughs and Allen Ginsberg, whose Bohemian life style and search for new philosophy profoundly influenced him. He was married for a short time with Edie Parker and after excessive use of Benzedrine he was hospitalized. Kerouac was addicted to the drug for most of his life.

In the early 1950s, Kerouac took a job in Washington State with the U.S. Forest Service as a fire watcher in a one-room fire lookout. In 1957, nine months before becoming famous with the publication of On the Road, he had an affair with Joyce Johnson (Glassman), who wrote about their relationship in Door Wide Open: A Beat Love Affair in Letters, 1957-1958 (2000). She was twenty-one. On the night of their first blind date in January 1957, Kerouac couldn't even afford to buy her a cup of coffee. "He told me how he'd promised his father that someday he'd buy his mother a house—maybe he'd really be able to do that eventually. He also hoped critics would admire his breakthrough into spontaneous, unfettered prose." (from Door Wide Open) As a writer Johnson did not gain such fame as the young men of the beat generation, proving perhaps with her fate the masculine character of the movement. "It's funny the way you and Allen and Peter came to town this winter and shook us all up," she notes in a letter. Just before the publication of On the Road Burroughs went with Ginsberg to Tangiers, where Burroughs was writing his most famous novel, The Naked Lunch.

On the Road was inspired by the drug-fuelled cross-country car rides that Kerouac made with Neal Cassady (1926-1968). The narrator, Sal Paradise, accompanies his friends on four separate trips as they travel the country, spending time in Colorado, California, Virginia, New York and Mexico. Carlo Marx is Allen Ginsberg and Neal Cassady is Dean Moriarty, who tells Sal: "... I can go anywhere in America and get what I want because it is the same in every corner. I know the people, I know what they do. We give and take and go in the incredibly complicated sweetness zigzagging every side." William Burroughs, who wrote under the pseudonym of William Lee about his heroin addiction, was Old Bull Lee - "... he was a teacher, and it may be said that he had every right to teach because he spent all his time learning; and the things he learned were what he considered to be and called "the facts of life," which he learned not only out of necessity but because he wanted to." The headlong style of the narrator underlines the description of lifestyle based on beauty, alcohol, jazz, sex, drugs, and mysticism. Kerouac wrote the book, at his kitchen table on West 20th Street, over a period of just 20 days on a single roll of telegraph paper. In the process he reinvented "automatic writing," which marked the writings of Surrealistic circles in Paris in the 1920s. Kerouac presented a new, spontaneous, unpolished style, the 'sound of the mind', similar to almost theatrical performance. It appealed subculture folksingers, hipsters, mystics, and writers. Truman Capote condemned to work, "That's not writing, that's typewriting", but it made Kerouac celebrated television personality and Neal Cassidy a model for an alternative lifestyle.

Kerouac´s THE DHARMA BUMS appeared in 1958. It paved way for Zen Buddhism as the philosophy for the bohemian artists´ communities of San Francisco´s North Beach, southern California´s Venice West and New York City´s Greenwich Village. The novel contained a portrait of the poet Gary Snyder, on whom the character Jaffe Ryder was based. The protagonist is Ray Smith, whose friend Ryder sees a vision of "thousands, or even millions of young Americans wandering around refusing to subscribe to the general demand that they consume production and therefore have to work for the privilege of consuming all that crap they didn't really want anyway, such as refrigerators, TV sets, cars, at least fancy new cars, certain hair oils and deodorants, etc." Smith starts to meditate, he rejects the society, and then returns to the world with the "vision of the freedom of eternity".

Disappointed by the way his works were misunderstood Kerouac retired to childhood town of Lowell, where he was looked after by his mother, Gabrielle, known as "Mémêre." When she had a paralysing stroke, Kerouac nursed her. Kerouac felt his role as a spokesman for the beat generation something of a burden, but occasionally participated to the cross-country adventures. More regularly he visited his home town's bars and clubs. He also married a local girl Stella Sampas. During these years he wrote a series of autobiographical novels. VISIONS OF GERARD (1963) was based on his childhood and depicted the last months in the life of the narrator's 9-year-old brother Gerard. "It is as though Kerouac believes that if only one were to write really bad prose, the result, with any kind of luck at all, would be literature, and disturbingly beautiful," wrote Saul Maloff in the New York Times (September 8, 1963). SATORI IN PARIS (1966) was an account of his quest for his Breton ancestors. "Somewhere during my ten days in Paris (and Brittany) I received an illumination of some kind that seems to've changed me again, towards what I suppose'll be my pattern for another seven years or more: in effect, a satori: the Japanese word for 'sudden illumination,' 'sudden awakening' or simply 'kick in the eye.'" THE SUBTERRANEANS (1958), was written in three days with the help of Benzedrine. It depicted Kerouac's - Leo Percepied in the book - affair with Mardou Fox, a mulatto woman. Critics were hot happy with its disintegration of syntax. In BIG SUR (1962) Kerouac's alter ego was Jack Duluoz. The book was part of the author's massive series The Duluoz Legend, in which he told the story of his life from 1922 to the summer of 1965.

Kerouac suffered abdominal hemorrhage whilst vomiting in his lavatory and died at home on October 21, 1969, in St. Petersburg, Florida. A few month earlier Neal Cassady's nude corpse had been discovered in Mexico. Kerouac's novel VISIONS OF CODY was published posthumously in 1972, but it was composed already in 1951-52. When his friends did not like On the Road, Kerouac started to write inserts to patch up the work. These grew into a new book. Although Ginsberg considered it a "holy mess", he did not change its rambling style and discontinuous structure which had the improvisational quality of jazz. New Directions published short selections from it in 1959, but rest of the work was rejected as pornographic. In 2000 appeared in digital format ORPHEUS EMERGED, the first full-length work of fiction after Vision of Cody. The novella was originally completed in 1945; in the new format the work includes also an introduction by the poet and scholar Robert Creeley, photographs, biography of the author, excerpts from Kerouac's journals, bibliographies, etc.

Selected works:

  • THE TOWN AND THE CITY, 1950
  • ON THE ROAD, 1957 - Matkalla (suom. Markku Lahtela, 1964)
  • THE DHARMA BUMS, 1958 - Dharmapummit (suom. Markus Jääskeläinen, 2001)
  • THE SUBTERRANEANS, 1958 - Maanalaiset (suom. Kimmo Lilja, 2002)
  • THE FLOATING WORLD, 1959
  • MEXICO CITY BLUES, 1959
  • MAGGIE CASSIDY, 1959
  • DOCTOR SAX, 1959
  • THE SCRIPTURE OF THE GOLDEN ETERNITY, 1960
  • LONESOME TRAVELLER, 1960
  • TRISTESSA, 1960 - Tristessa (suom. Elina Koskelin, Seppo Lahtinen ja Vesa-Matti Paija, 2006)
  • PULL MY DAISY, 1961
  • BOOK OF DREAMS, 1961
  • BIG SUR, 1962 - Tuuliajolla Big Surissa (suom. Markus Jääskeläinen, 2002)
  • VISIONS OF GERARD, 1963
  • DESOLATION ANGELS, 1965 - Desolationin enkelit (suom. Jaakko Yli-Juonikas, 2004)
  • SATORI IN PARIS, 1966
  • SOME OF THE DHARMA, 1997
  • VANITY OF DULOUTZ, 1968
  • PIC, 1971
  • SCATTERED POEMS, 1971
  • VISIONS OF CODY, 1972
  • HEAVEN, 1977
  • ORPHEUS EMERGED, 2000 (published in digital format by LiveREADS)
  • WINDBLOWN WORLD. THE JOURNALS OF JACK KEROUAC, 1947-1954, 2004 (ed. by Douglas Brinkley
  • AND THE HIPPOS WERE BOILED IN THEIR TANKS, 2008 (with William S. Burroughs, written in 1945)
Taken from: http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/kerouac.htm
Author: Petri Liukkonen
Some rights reserved Petri Liukkonen (author) & Ari Pesonen. Kuusankosken kaupunginkirjasto 2008

1 comment:

Rick Dale, author of The Beat Handbook said...

Excellent post.

Maybe you'd enjoy my Kerouac-inspired blog at www.thedailybeatblog.blogspot.com.