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Beatniks

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Beatniks 

(from “beat” [beat, break]), a spontaneous, anarchically rebellious youth movement (“the insolent generation”; Russian, razbitnoe pokolenie) that arose after World War II, mainly in the USA and Great Britain; devoid of any positive sociopolitical program whatever. This movement was an expression of the dissatisfaction and protest of young people (primarily petit bourgeois) against the standardized ideal of “success” and the hypocrisy of the bourgeois morality of “good conduct” and “decency.” In breaking with the generally accepted traditional bourgeois way of life, the “radicalism” of beatniks was frequently manifested in the violation of elementary norms of the human community.



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Think of the beatniks, those literary hipsters with style to boot.
They were beatniks who'd conspired to miss every point about being a beatnik: not marijuana but cider, not berets but bowler hats, not Charlie Parker but a bloke from Somerset in a striped waistcoat doing When The Saints Go Marching In.
Lady beatniks also available, usual garb, all black.
 
 
 
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