THE BEA There Is Nothing Left TE By AlT YOUNG Oh the world is a beautiful place to be born into if you don't mind a few dead minds in the higher places or a bomb or two now and then in your upturned faces or other such improprieties as our Name Brand society is prey to with its men of distinction and its men of extinction Carthyism, soared high. Econon ically, the official cry was "Ba to normalcy!" which was suppos to mean back to the way thin were before all hell broke loos but which really meant a retui to the very domestic hell th existed long before the war. Socially, conformity was pavir a one-way road leading nowher Military imperialism was char pioned by default. Scientif achievement was put to inhumt use. The Cold War was on and nation was shivering. ... and otner patrolmen The post war scene had its cu and its various segregations tural reverberations. A generatic and congressional investiga- of youngsters were growing up wl tions had not the slightest interesti and other constipations politics - neither domestic n that our fool flesh international-and who had litt is heir to . .. or nothing at all left to believe t --Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Pictures of the Gone World JHE literature emerging fro this era falls into two princip THE CLOSE of World War Two categories: the one, a frail, pr marked the appearance of a cious school of writing detachi conservative epoch with few coun- from social themes that took ul terparts in American history, on itself to explore "the gre Politically, public discourage- moral questions of mid - centui ment and apathy, prodded by Mc- society." he writes extemporaneously with- THE THREAD that sews all of out plan or revision, these writers together is that This perhaps explains the ex- of Disaffiliation. Critic Lawrence " cess of journalism cluttering his Lipton was the first to use the L otherwise remarkable "On the phrase in a series of articles on Road." It also explains the slop- the Beats appearing in The Na- piness of "The Subterraneans," a tion. S elieve I hundred or so pages of trash the Disaffiliation - with a capital Believe III, authortye up in 72 hours. "The D, thank you - is the core of their Dharma Bums," a novel dealing message. They are not interested with hipster Zen Bhuddists, was in social ills - much less point- another artistic failure, though ing out cures for them. They are financially successful. Following not interested in The State with the publication of his first novel in its politics and conventions and in- a- Writers representing this school 1950, "The Town and the City," stitutions and academies. They k include Truman Capote, Paul Kerouac hoboed around the coun- are not interested in being "saved" ad Bowles,obie Macauley and Jeani try and wrote fifteen novels be- from "The Red Menace." They are 4 gs, Stafford - the "new fictionists" fore "On the Road" was published. not interested in seeking refuge ie, if you will; clever and, for all in Suburbia, and "changing the rn practical purposes, sterile, THE POEM-MAKERS are more world" is entirely out of the ques- at The other, the San Francisco numerous - Gary Snyder, Phi- tion. School, is a robust, free-wheeling lip Whaley, Ro rt Creeley, Mike What they want is to be left ng school of story-tellers and poets McClure. aloneMany of them earn their re. whose writing is, peculiarly A n- enough, socially oriented and As for prominent ones, Denise livings as laborers-skilled or ur- ic whose professional and personal Levertov, comes to mind. She's a skilled-and stay as far away as an antics have been the subject of young Britisher who settled in possible from cocktail parties, New a much public discussion. America long enough to get mar- York City and, most of all, the Novelist Jack Kerouac appears ried and migrate to Mexico. She universities. to be the unofficial leader since writes like many of the 50's poets, lo e the un o "rsik including some who don't consider T IS TRUE that much of their o " he was the first one to "break themselves "Beat" - lyrically per- writing is sincerely passionate, ho big" and since it was his appela- sonal in a prosody that is decep- even beautiful. But their philos- in tion for the group - "The Beat tively simple. ophy is a sad one, pathetic in a or Generation" - that was popu- OnYol hn htTeM-wy llarized.. One would think that The Ma- way. nl jor Themes were gone, for they They are anarchists in an era THE PROSE writers include Wil- have been replaced by quiet cele- that needs, more than ever before, m hiam Burroughs whose "Naked brations of simple personal pleas- the courage and conviction that SLunch" is possibly the most fright- ures, nature and individual being. youth can offer toward saving the e- ening book on narcotics addiction She resembles the Japanese and world from an unbelievably sinis- ed ever written. ancient Chinese poets in this re- ter self-destruction. They are in- p- His approach is compelling and spect. Her major works are "The different. Unable to face a society at certainly worthy of inspection by Double Image" and "Here and pregnant with injustice, hypocrisy at erainy orhy f nsectonbyNow," two volumes of verse. and decay, they have turned with- ry those who think literary expert- in themselves for a "peaceful ment died with Gertrude Stein, James Joyce and Tristan Tzara. ALLEN GINSBERG and his long existence. -n poem "Howl" have received Many of France's intellectuals Another exponent is James so much publicity that the poet who felt themselves "demobilized" Purdy whose "Color of Darkness" i"dizzy with success," presently following the wartime Resistance (inscribed 'for Edith Sitwell in finds himself unable to write movement, turned to existential- Englandrn is a bitter little osud' poetry. Frankly, "owl" is quite tam. The so-called Beats have run book of yarns. The tone of Purdy'so a mediocre poem all dressed up a gamut of mystiques and escapist short stories is reminiscent of in a fantastic idiom. Nonetheless philosophies from A to Z - Zen Poe, but much colder and much insbern'stin muN onetyelnss,'Bhuddism being the most recent. more cnvincng beauseTfhhiscc-iGisbergspinfuenceamongyoung l centric manipulation of reality er poets has been considerable. This oriental philosophy, more Of course, there is Kerouac in Lawrence Ferlinghetti, a PhD. a philosophy than a religion, all his spontaneous splendor. Sev- who runs the City Lights Bookshop stresses the imphanp c sthroug eral critics have compared his in San Francisco, is both a pub- meditation and simplicity rouv work with the Celine of "Death on lisher and a poet. His "Pictures of the Installment Plan" and "Guig- the Gone World" is as bittersweet ing nol's Band." as poetry comes these days. In an their protest is le- Actually, you can take a glance attempt to restore the spoken el- CERTAINLY back at Thomas Wolfe to get an ment to poetry, Ferlinghetti Pio-. gitemately founded. The hope idea of Keronac's stylistic roois. neered in the presentation of is that their efforts will be turned His expression of the depth and poetry with jazz in West Coast in a more positive direction, that intensity of life has rarely been nightspots. their influence will inspire a fresh equaled in American letters. It is As for Kenneth Rexroth - he's school of writers who will not be found in the early Whitman and an oldtimer, often regarded as satisfied just knowing the prob- in Mark Twain, Karouac is an "the spiritual father" of the move- lems but who will also want to automatic writer, that is to say ment, along with Henry Miller, work at some hathy solutions. an old "rebel" from way back. After all, you don't have to look Rexroth's influence is very much far to find that some of the most Junior Al Young, co-editor ' felt throughout the movement, conforming "squares" are the hip- of Generation magazine, writes Now in his fifties, poet-scholar- sters themselves who are so blind- on literature, jazz and folklore musician - painter - mountain- ed by their ersatz "revolt" they and is a frequent contributor climber Rexroth said on a recent cannot see the direction backwards to The Daily. visit to Manhattan, "I've lived the they travel in. Slife Kerouac thinks he's lived." Rexroth himself, believe it or --- - -----not, put it this way: "The hipster is the furious square, The Beat novelists and their camp followers CLOSEOUT, SPECIAL S ALE ate debauched Puritans. They -aree with the most hostile critic. of GUITARS and accessories, of jazz, or for that matter with s ,the most chauvinistic slanderers of BONGOS, other small goods the American Negro. They just like it that way. In their utter ignorance they embrace the false LARGE REDUCTIONS! image which their enemies the squares have painted." D AAY M USThWhat was it someone said about /' IQThe Scared Generation being a 508 E. William NO 3-3395 more fitting tag than The Beat Generation? This Is Joan Ready for her most exciting date of the season. Pert, pretty and practical in her swirl of a dress of flowered cotton entirely covered with transparent organdy. Pink or yellow . . . $29.95 FOR TOWN AND COLLEGE 302 South State Street Page Twelve i i r tl I + V ILAKEDJESIIGNS 209 SOTIsI SATE STREET (Below Marshall's Book Score) Fcaiurin- ti C ARIi'NGS fjroai -KENYA -OIL ON CHARRED WOOL -GUATEMALA -MOSAICS -INDIA -CRAFTED JEWEILRY -BALI by Lake -MEXICO -ASSORTED JADE RINGS -EBONY PENDANTS n "Perfect freedom is reserved for the man who lives by his on work and in that work does what he wants to do." -R.G. COLLINGWOOD THE MICHIGAN DAILY MAGAZINE