French Genealogy of the Beat Generation
«Lane has written a pearl of a book, illuminating a central aspect of Beat literature that's long been obscure.»
Ann Charters, Professor of American Literature, University of Connecticut, USA
The Francophilia of the Beat circle in the New York of the mid-1940s is well known, as is the importance of the Beat Hotel in the Paris of the late 1950s and early 1960s, but how exactly did French literature and culture participate in the emergence of the Beat Generation? French modernism did much more than inspire its first major writers, it materially shaped their works, as this comparative study reveals through close textual analysis of William Burroughs, Allen Ginsberg and Jack Kerouac's appropriations of French literature and culture. Les mer
While clarifying the extent of Burroughs, Ginsberg and Kerouac's engagements with French literature and culture, in-depth analysis of their textual appropriations emphasises differences in their views of literature, philosophy and politics, which help us understand the early Beat circle was divided from the start. The book's close-readings also transform our perception of Burroughs' cut-up practice, Kerouac's spontaneous prose, and Ginsberg's poetics of open secrecy.
Detaljer
- Forlag
- Bloomsbury Academic USA
- Språk
- Engelsk
- Sider
- 224
- ISBN
- 9781501325069
- Utgivelsesår
- 2017
Anmeldelser
«Lane has written a pearl of a book, illuminating a central aspect of Beat literature that's long been obscure.»
Ann Charters, Professor of American Literature, University of Connecticut, USA
«The first and most thorough book-length attempt to rectify [a] disciplinary blind-spot by uncovering the major Beat Generation writers' multi-faceted appropriations of French literary antecedents. From a Francophone perspective, but with a comparativist's sensibility for nuanced readings of translingual and cross-cultural literary appropriation, Lane's essays tackle both the infamous and the forgotten works of Jack Kerouac, Allen Ginsberg, and William S. Burroughs … Through her genealogical, archaeological, and inter-textual approach, Lane's startling, at times haunting, juxtapositions reveal the vibrant and diverse evolution of transatlantic cultural networks across a constellation of slippery texts and subversive artworks … In her genealogy of the French roots of the Beat Generation's rhizomatic outgrowths, Véronique Lane's The French Genealogy of the Beat Generation offers an entertaining and erudite invitation to explore the transcultural appropriations that generated America's most subversive and marginalized literature.»
L'Esprit Créateur
«Lane's groundbreaking study ... is replete with original and perceptive comparative close readings that will appeal to French as well as Beat literature specialists.»
French Studies
«Véronique Lane's The French Genealogy of the Beat Generation fills an important and often unacknowledged gap in the study of these seemingly echt-American rebels. The Beats' literary Frenchness is more than an artifact of their time-it is a key to their literary values and a measure of the tradition of literary revolt that spread from 19th-century France across continents and centuries. Lane elucidates the connections with wit, grace, and style.»
Luc Sante, Visiting Professor of Writing and the History of Photography, Bard College, USA, and auth
«This timely and informative book establishes the importance of French writers for the Beat generation of writers so effortlessly and convincingly that one can only wonder why it has never been done before. Deploying an intimate grasp of the works of Burroughs, Ginsberg and Kerouac based on detailed textual analysis, this ambitious study is sure to be a reference-point for many years to come.»
Mairéad Hanrahan, Professor and Chair of French, University College London, UK
«Véronique Lane's informed close readings succeed in showing that French Modernity was much more than a mere influence for the major Beat authors. While clarifying their relations to the works of Rimbaud, of Cocteau, but also of Saint-John Perse and Michaux or the cinema of Carné, this study revives in unexpected ways the poetic project, embraced by both the American and French traditions it investigates, of changing our idea of mankind. A book that ought to be read on both sides of the Atlantic.»
Dominique Rabaté, Professor of 20th Century French Literature, Université Paris Diderot - Paris VII,