|
|
|||
|
||||
OverviewAllen Ginsberg's life and career can only be described as exceptional. Fond of pushing limits and challenging boundaries, Ginsberg produced a staggering body of work that garnered attention not just for its innovative style and personal candor, but for its range of theme and willingness to meaningfully engage the world in a bid to change it. Ginsberg is essential to an understanding of 20th century poetry. But Ginsberg was not just a poet. He was an icon, instantly recognizable to his legions of fans in underground circles, and it is impossible to overstate the importance of Ginsberg as a countercultural figure. Taking a broadly chronological approach, this volume provides a comprehensive overview of the major issues, themes, and moments essential to understanding Ginsberg, his work, and his outsized influence on the cultural politics of the postwar both in the US and globally. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Erik Mortenson (Lake Michigan College)Publisher: Cambridge University Press Imprint: Cambridge University Press ISBN: 9781009525589ISBN 10: 1009525581 Pages: 400 Publication Date: 30 April 2026 Audience: General/trade , College/higher education , General , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Forthcoming Availability: Not yet available, will be POD This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon it's release. This is a print on demand item which is still yet to be released. Table of ContentsPart I. Early Years and Influences: 1. Ginsberg and the labor movement Ben Lee; 2. The Columbia university years A. Robert Lee; 3. William Carlos Williams Terence Diggory; 4. Whitman Anne Lovering Rounds; 5. Blake, romanticism, and the visionary Luke Walker; 6. Ginsberg's complex French influences Peggy Pacini; 7. Jack Kerouac Tanguy Harma; Part II. Career Highlights: 8. 6 Gallery and the breakthrough of 'Howl' Kurt Hemmer; 9. The Vietnam war and countercultural activism Steve Belletto; 10. Into the Vortex: Allen Ginsberg's The Fall of America Jonah Raskin; 11. First blues: music in the life and work of Allen Ginsberg Steve Taylor; 12. Photography Daniel Morris; 13. Ginsberg in the classroom Erik Mortenson; Part III. International Travels: 14. Mexico David Stephen Calonne; 15. The beat hotel Barry Miles; 16. Ginsberg's South American trips Oliver Harris; 17. A counterrevolutionary Camerado: Ginsberg's month in Cuba Eric Keenaghan; 18. Prague Antonin Zita; 19. India Raj Chandarlapaty; 20. China David Wills; Part IV. Major Themes: 21. Poetry as Confession: Ginsberg, T. S. Eliot, and the New York school poets Stephen Paul Miller; 22. Madness, mental illness, and 'Kaddish for Naomi Ginsberg' Stevan M. Weine; 23. Queer sexuality: La Grande permission Rona Cran; 24. Ginsberg and drugs Marcus Boon; 25. Nature and nuclear reckoning in Ginsberg's 'Plutonian Ode' Chad Weidner; 26. Was Allen Ginsberg Jewish? Stephen Fredman; 27. Playing with the perfections: Allen Ginsberg's Buddhist poetics John Whalen-Bridge; 28. Domesticity Steven Gould Axelrod; Part V. Death and Afterlife: 29. Recording the body's and body politics' demise: death and fame Bill Mohr; 30. Ginsberg's archive Bill Morgan; 31. Allen Ginsberg's iconic statuses Michael Prince.ReviewsAuthor InformationErik Mortenson is a Faculty Member in English at Lake Michigan College in Benton Harbor, Michigan. He is the author of Capturing the Beat Moment: Cultural Politics and the Poetics of Presence (2011), Ambiguous Borderlands: Shadow Imagery in Cold War American Culture (2016), and Translating the Counterculture: The Reception of the Beats in Turkey (2018). He has also edited The Beats and the Academy: A Renegotiation (Clemson 2023) with Tony Trigilio, and Rethinking Kerouac: Afterlives, Continuities, Reappraisals (Bloomsbury 2024) with Tomasz Sawczuk. His memoir of bohemian Detroit, Kick Out the Bottom (2023), was co-written with Christopher Kramer. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
||||