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Screening the Beats: Media Culture and the Beat Sensibility » (1st Edition)

Book cover image of Screening the Beats: Media Culture and the Beat Sensibility by David Sterritt

Authors: David Sterritt
ISBN-13: 9780809325634, ISBN-10: 0809325632
Format: Hardcover
Publisher: Southern Illinois University Press
Date Published: January 2004
Edition: 1st Edition

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Author Biography: David Sterritt

A film critic of the Christian Science Monitor for more than thirty years, David Sterritt is a professor of theater and film at the C.W. Post Campus of Long Island University. His books include Mad to Be Saved: The Beats, the ‘50s, and Film; The Films of Alfred Hitchcock; and The Films of Jean-Luc Godard: Seeing the Invisible.

Book Synopsis

Film critic David Sterritt’s Screening the Beats: Media Culture and the Beat Sensibility showcases the social and aesthetic viewpoints of lynchpin Beat writers Jack Kerouac, William S. Burroughs, and Allen Ginsberg, juxtaposing their artistry with 1950s culture and achieving what Kerouac might have called a “bookmovie” riff. In clear prose, Sterritt captures the raw energy of the Beats and joins in their celebration of aesthetic freakishness. Tapping into the diversified spirit of the Beat Generation and its nuanced relationship with postwar American culture, Sterritt considers how the Beats variously foreground, challenge, and illuminate major issues in Hollywood and avant-garde film, critical and cultural theory, and music in the mass-media age.

 

Sterritt engages the creative and spiritual facets of the Beats, emulating their desire to evoke ephemeral aspects of human existence. Dealing with both high and low cultures as well as various subcultures, he highlights the complementary contributions to cultural creativity made by these authors. Screening the Beats grapples with paradoxes in Beat writing, in particular the conflict between spiritual purity and secular connectedness, which often materialized in the beatific bebop spontaneity, Zen-like transcendentalism, and plain hipster smarts that characterized the writings of Kerouac, Burroughs, and Ginsberg.

 

This interdisciplinary study tackles such topics as Ginsberg’s and Kerouac’s uses of racial and ethnic stereotypes prevalent in the popular movies of the 1950s era; the uses and limitations of improvisation as a creative tool in literature,jazz, and film; Kerouac’s use of cinematic metaphor to evoke Buddhist concepts; and intersections of the grotesque and carnivalesque in works as seemingly diverse as autobiographical novels by Kerouac, a radio play by Antonin Artaud, cultural theories of Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari, and the boisterous lunacy of Three Stooges farce. Deftly threading literary, musical, and cinematic works with a colorful array of critical theories, Screening the Beats illuminates the relationship between American culture and the imaginative forces of the Beat Generation.

Table of Contents

Preface
Acknowledgments
1Beats, Movies, and Ills of Postwar America1
2Lisped, Muxed, and Completely Flunk: Jack Kerouac Meets the Three Stooges21
3Desolation Angels: Kerouac, Buddhism, and Film48
4Revision, Prevision, and the Aura of Improvisatory Art57
5Constructing the Grotesque Body in Word, Image, and Sound77
Notes105
Index127

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