road and rediscover your lost American freedom.
   The phrase "beat generation" came out of a spe-
   cific conversation between Jack Kerouac and John
   Clellon Holmes in 1948 in which Kerouac distinguished
   his generation from the glamorous Lost Generation.
   Kerouac most likely picked up the word "beat" from his friend Herbert Huncke, who was familiar with the street
   lingo of the time. "Beat" connoted broke, homeless, exhausted, emptied out. But Kerouac also used the word
   to imply "beatific." Holmes wrote an article for The New York Times Magazine in 1952 which was headlined,
   "This Is the Beat Generation," and when Kerouac later published an excerpt from On the Road called "Jazz of the Beat Generation," the term took hold.
   The main figures in the movement were situated
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   ORPHEUS EMERGED 269
   in New York and California. New York writers associated
   with the Beats include Jack Kerouac, Neal Cassady,
   Holmes, Allen Ginsberg, Gregory Corso, Huncke, LeRoi
   Jones, Diane DiPrima, and William Burroughs; in San
   Francisco were Gary Snyder, Lawrence Ferlinghetti,
   Kenneth Rexroth, Philip Whalen, Robert Creeley and
   Michael McClure. A number of these writers (including
   Kerouac, Whalen, Snyder, and Ginsberg) became
   involved in meditation and Buddhism. City Lights
   Books, established in San Francisco by Ferlinghetti, was
   a key factor, both as bookshop and publisher, in making
   the work of the Beats known. The quintessential texts of
   the movement are Ginsberg’s Howl, Kerouac’s On the Road, and Burroughs’ Naked Lunch.
   But the Beat Movement was more than the output
   of these poets and writers. The Beat sensibility was
   shared by painters (Larry Rivers), filmmakers and pho-
   tographers (Robert Frank and Alfred Leslie), musicians
   (David Amram), and others who considered themselves
   connected to the long tradition of bohemianism in
   America.
   As is often the case with counter-cultural, anti-
   establishment, outsider movements, the mainstream
   culture eventually found ways to categorize, caricature,
   de-value, and ultimately co-opt the Beats. They were
   depicted in the media as crazy beret-wearing and bongo-
   beating weirdos, conspiratorial commies, amoral homos,
   filthy drug-addicted hipsters, or just no-talent losers and
   hangers-on. The media frenzy actually turned the Beat
   Movement into a fad, and inevitably the established lit-
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   ORPHEUS EMERGED 270
   erary and art-criticism world did not take the work seri-
   ously.
   Over time, however, the works generated by the
   Beats have emerged as lasting, valuable contributions to
   the culture, and the ideas informing those works have
   endured. In an article published in 1982, Ginsberg char-
   acterized some of the effects of the Beat ethos in these
   terms:
   Spiritual liberation, sexual "revolution" or "liberation,"
   i.e., gay liberation, somewhat catalyzing women’s libera-
   tion, black liberation, Gray Panther activism.
   Liberation of the word from censorship.
   Demystificaiton and/or decriminalization of some laws
   against marijuana and other drugs.
   The evolution of rhythm and blues into rock and roll as
   a high art form, as evidenced by the Beatles, Bob Dylan,
   and other popular musicians influenced in the late fifties
   and sixties by Beat generation poets’ and writers’ works.
   The spread of ecological consciousness, emphasized
   early on by Gary Snyder and Michael McClure’s notion of
   a "Fresh Planet."
   Opposition to the military-industrial machine civiliza-
   tion, as emphasized in the writings of Burroughs,
   Huncke, Ginsberg, and Kerouac.
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   ORPHEUS EMERGED 271
   Attention to what Kerouac called (after Spengler) a "second religiousness" developing within an advanced civi-
   lization.
   Return to an appreciation of idiosyncrasy as against state
   regimentation.
   Respect for land and indigenous peoples and creatures,
   as proclaimed by Kerouac in his slogan from On the
   Road: "The Earth is an Indian thing."
   The Beats are now generally regarded as the ven-
   erable upholders of a great American tradition that orig-
   inated with Thoreau and Whitman. Their attitude, style,
   and approach to life first resonated in the youth of the
   postwar period. But their spirit and their ideas -- paci-
   fism, reverence for nature and naturalness, conscious-
   ness-enhancement/expansion, faith in the divinity of the
   self – and the art they created will continue to influence
   and inspire young people of all generations.
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   ORPHEUS EMERGED 272
   The World of
   Jack Kerouac
   There are dozens of websites about
   Jack Kerouac and/or the Beat
   Movement. Most of these sites offer
   links to related sites. These are some
   of the best sites.
   SITES:
   Literary Kicks
   Beat Poetry
   Jack Kerouac Page
   The Kerouac Connection
   Kerouac Speaks
   The Beat Page
   Jack Kerouac’s San Francisco Blue
   Neon Alley
   DHARMA beat
   Beat Cafe
   DISCUSSION GROUPS:
   Subterraneans
   alt.books.beatgeneration
   LiveREADS
   ORPHEUS EMERGED 273
   Selected Bibliography
   of Books About
   Jack Kerouac
   (click on titles to purchase)
   Amburn, Ellis. Subterranean
   Johnson, Joyce. Minor Characters:
   Kerouac: The Hidden Life of Jack
   A Young Woman’s Coming of Age in
   Kerouac. New York: St. Martin’s
   the Beat Orbit of Jack Kerouac. New
   Press, 1998.
   York: Penguin, 1999.
   Cassady, Carolyn. Heart Beat: My
   Johnson, Joyce and Jack
   Life with Jack and Neal. Berkeley:
   Kerouac. Door Wide Open: A
   Creative Arts Book Company, 1976.*
   Beat Love Affair in Letters, 1957-
   1958. New York: Viking Press,
   Cassady, Carolyn. Off the Road: My
   2000.
   Years with Cassady, Kerouac, and
   Ginsberg. New York: Penguin,
   Jones, James T. Jack Kerouac’s
   1991.
   Duluoz Legend: The Mythic
   Form of an Autobiographical
   Charters, Ann. Kerouac: A
   Fiction. Southern Illinois Press,
   Biography. San Francisco:
   1999.
   Straight Arrow, 1973.*
   Kazin, Alfred. Contemporaries.
   Charters, Ann. Kerouac: A
   Boston: Little Brown, 1962.*
   Biography. New York: St. Martin’s
   Press, 1994.
   McDarrah, Fred. Kerouac and
   Friends: A Beat Generation
   Clark, Tom. Jack Kerouac. New
   Album. New York: Morrow,
   York: Paragon House, 1984.
   1984.*
   Giamo, Ben. Kerouac, the Word and
   McNally, Dennis. Desolation
   the W 
					     					 			ay. Southern Illinois University
   Angel: Jack Kerouac, the Beats
   Press, 2000.
   and America. New York:
   Random House, 1979.*
   Gifford, Barry and Lawrence Lee.
   Jack’s Book: An Oral Biography of
   Miles, Barry. Jack Kerouac King
   Jack Kerouac. New York: St.
   of the Beats: A Portrait. New
   Martin’s Press, 1978.
   York: Henry Holt, 1998.
   Jarvis, Charles E. Visions of
   Sandison, David and Carolyn
   Kerouac. Lowell, MA: Ithaca Press,
   Cassady. Jack Kerouac: An
   1974.*
   Illustrated Biography. Chicago:
   Chicago Review Press, 1999.
   * currently not available online.
   LiveREADS
   ORPHEUS EMERGED 275
   Selected Bibliography
   of Books About
   the Beats
   (click on titles to purchase)
   Ash, Mel. Beat Spirit: The Way of
   McClure, Michael. Scratching
   the Beat Writers as Living
   the Beat Surface. North Point,
   Experience. New York: Putnam,
   1992.*
   1997.
   McDarrah, Fred and Gloria.
   Carr, R. B. Case and F. Dellar. The
   The Beat Generation: Glory
   Hip: Hipsters, Jazz and the Beat
   Days in Greenwich Village.
   Generation. Faber and Faber,
   Schirmer Books, 1996.*
   1986.*
   Miles, Barry. The Beat Hotel:
   Charters, Anne, editor. The
   Ginsberg, Burroughs, and Corso
   Portable Beat Reader. New York:
   in Paris, 1958-1963. New York:
   Viking Press, 1992.
   Grove Press, 2000.
   Cook, Bruce. The Beat Generation.
   Morgan, Bill. The Beat
   New York: Scribner, 1971.*
   Generation in New York: A
   Walking Tour of Jack Kerouac’s
   Duberman, Martin. Black
   City. San Fransisco: City
   Mountain: An Exploration in
   Lights, 1997.
   Community. New York: Dutton
   Press, 1972.
   Tytell, John. Naked Angels: The
   Life and Literature of the Beat
   George-Warren, Holly, editor. The
   Generation. New York:
   Rolling Stone Book of the Beats: The
   McGraw-Hill, 1976.
   Beat Generation and American
   Culture. New York: Hyperion, 1999.
   Tytell, John, photographs by
   Mellon. Paradise Outlaws:
   Gold, Herbert. Bohemia: Digging
   Remembering the Beats. New
   the Roots of Cool. New York: Simon
   York: William Morrow, 1999.
   & Schuster/Touchstone, 1994.*
   Waldman, Anne, editor. The
   Gruen, John, photographs by Fred
   Beat Book: Writings from the
   McDarrah. The New Bohemia.
   Beat Generation. Boston;
   Chicago: A Cappella, 1990.*
   Shambhala, 1999.
   Halberstam, David. The Fifties.
   * currently not available online.
   New York: Villard Books, 1993.
   Mailer, Norman. The White Negro.
   San Francisco: City Lights, 1957.
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   ORPHEUS EMERGED 277
   Multimedia
   Elements
   A
   Listen to a short reading of ORPHEUS EMERGED
   streamed by Salon.com. Sit back and enjoy this
   merging of the media. CLICK HERE TO START THE
   AUDIO.
   You will need the RealPlayer to experience this. If
   you do not have the RealPlayer, CLICK HERE.
   LiveREADS
   ORPHEUS EMERGED 278
   Multimedia
   Elements
   View a segment from the documentary feature
   V
   about the Beats, The Source.
   The Source is notable for its wealth of vital source information, including interviews with virtually all
   the key participants in the Beat Movement, and
   clips of Jack Kerouac, Allen Ginsberg, Neal
   Cassady, and William Burroughs, among others.
   There are also performance segments featuring
   Johnny Depp, John Turturro, and Dennis Hopper.
   The video you will see here focuses on Jack
   Kerouac right around the time he first met
   Ginsberg and Burroughs – and wrote Orpheus
   Emerged. CLICK HERE TO START THE VIDEO.
   (This clip is from The Source, a film by Chuck
   Workman, presented by Hiro Yamagata, distrib-
   uted by Winstar Film and Video.) (Video streamed
   through Apple’s QuickTime. You will need
   QuickTime to play the video. CLICK HERE IF YOU
   NEED THE QUICKTIME PLAYER.)
   TO BUY THE SOURCE FROM BN.COM (CLICK HERE)
   LiveREADS
   ORPHEUS EMERGED 279
   CAPTIONS
   Captions for pictures in text:
   Cover: Jack Kerouac circa 1945, when he completed
   Orpheus Emerged.
   p. 5:
   Kerouac, mid-1940s
   p. 6:
   Jack Kerouac, Allen Ginsberg, and William
   Burroughs at Columbia University.
   p. 8:
   Kerouac, mid-1940s.
   p. 35
   Kerouac and sister, Caroline, early 1940’s.
   p. 48
   Kerouac’s wallet ID photo, 1960s.
   p. 52
   Kerouac self portrait, mid-1940’s.
   p. 66:
   “Two Drinkers,” painting by Jack Kerouac.
   p. 69: Kerouac, mid-1960s.
   p. 75:
   “Stella by Jack,” drawing by Jack Kerouac.
   p. 83:
   “God,” painting by Jack Kerouac.
   Timeline captions:
   1922:
   Leo and Garielle Kerouac, date unknown.
   1923:
   (top) Leo Kerouac as a young man; (bottom) Jack
   and Nin Kerouac, early 1920s.
   1926:
   (top) Kerouac as a boy, circa 1932; (middle) Jack
   with sister Nin and Boopsie the cat, circa 1930; (bot-
   tom) Kerouac and friend Mike Fournier at Salisbury
   Beach, 1931.
   1935:
   (top) Claire and Sebastien Sampas, circa 1939; (bot-
   tom) Jack with his dog, Beauty, mid-1930s.
   1939:
   (top) Kerouac as a high school senior, Lowell,
   Massachusetts, 1938; (bottom) Kerouac and his
   mother with unidentified woman, 1930s.
   1939-1940:
   (top) A page from the Lowell High School yearbook,
   1938; (bottom) Kerouac’s childhood friends Stella
   and Sebastien Sampas, on banks of Merrimack River,
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   ORPHEUS EMERGED 280
   circa 1939.
   1940-1941:
   Kerouac with Columbia College football team.
   1942-1943:
   “The Blood of the Poet,” November 10, 1944. (Card
   reads: “Blood-stained string used as a tourniquet for
   finger, November 10, 1944.”)
   1944:
   (top) Jack, sister Caroline, Gabrielle, and Leo Kerouac,
   early 1940s; (bottom) Kerouac’s discharge from his job
   as “scullion” on freighter, 1942.
   1946:
   Jack and Caroline at Rockaway Beach, 1945.
   1947:
   Kerouac, 1940s.
   1948:
   (top) Kerouac’s handwritten map of his cross-country
   trip, July-October, 1947; (bottom) Kerouac (third fro 
					     					 			m
   right) and unidentified friends, mid-1940s.
   1949:
   One of Kerouac’s rucksacks.
   1950:
   San Francisco Examiner review of The Dharma Bums,
   Sunday, October 8, 1959.
   1951:
   (top) “Two Drinkers,” painting by Kerouac; (bottom)
   Kerouac’s paintbox.
   1953: Passport, signed “John-Louis Kerouac.”
   1954:
   Kerouac’s copy of the issue of New World Writing con-
   taining “Jazz of the Beat Generation,” by “Jean-Louis.”
   1955:
   Keoruac’s sister Caroline, nephew Paul Blake, Jr., moth-
   er Gabrielle, and Kerouac in North Carolina, mid-1950s.
   1959: Kerouac’s wallet ID photo, 1960s.
   1962:
   Kerouac, early 1960s
   1964:
   (top) Jack in 1966; (bottom) Jack, mid-1960s.
   1965:
   Jack’s mother, 1966.
   1966:
   Kerouac, mid-1960s.
   1967:
   Jack and Stella, late 1960s.
   1969:
   Kerouac with cat, late 1960s.
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   ORPHEUS EMERGED 281
   About LiveREADS
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   icated to exploring the new frontier of reading.
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   we believe e-publishing is much more than
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   Credits
   GRAND DHARMA BUM HIMSELF – Jack Kerouac
   GUARDIAN OF THE TRUST – John Sampas
   CONSUMMATE GENTLEMAN – Sterling Lord
   KEEPER OF THE FLAME – David Stanford
   MAGICIAN OF DESIGN – Roger Gorman
   EBOOKSMITHS - Danielle Lee and Tim Cooper
   MARKETING GURUS – Mark Jupiter and Amara Ingber
   SPREADERS OF THE WORD – Scott Manning and Meryl Zegarek
   TRUE BELIEVER – Ben Schafer