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Beat movement

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Beat movement

American social and literary movement of the 1950s and '60s. It is associated with artists' communities in San Francisco, Los Angeles, and New York. Its adherents expressed alienation from conventional society and advocated personal release and illumination through heightened sensory awareness and altered states of consciousness. Beat poets, including Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Allen Ginsberg, Gregory Corso (1930–2001), and Gary Snyder, sought to liberate poetry from academic refinement, creating verse that was vernacular, sometimes sprinkled with obscenities, but often powerful and moving. Jack Kerouac and William S. Burroughs developed an unstructured, spontaneous, sometimes hallucinatory approach to prose writing that was designed to convey the immediacy of experience. The Beat movement had faded by c. 1970, though its influence continued to be felt decades later.


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As part of the Beat movement of poetry in the 1950s and 1960s, Ginsberg expresses horror and alienation in a post-WWII American culture and couches his dissatisfaction in obscenities designed to match the obscenities of the Holocaust and Hiroshima: "Go fuck yourself with your atom bomb.
Kerouac is identified with the Beat movement, utilized many of his own life events in some of his finest works, and yet remains shrouded in myth in many similar coverages.
Of course, it's a five-hour drive (that) took us two days,'' said Cassady, whose father was the late Neal Cassady - the legendary folk hero of the Beat Movement captured in Jack Kerouac's ``On The Road.
 
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