This paper endeavours to advance new readings of Jack Kerouac’s The Dharma Bums in a contemporary cultural and literary context. It is specifically dealt with a deconstructive study of his writing and preoccupied with his negotiations of spirituality within the structure of Post-War America’s accelerated culture. Kerouac’s liability to the modernist approaches after all, this paper contends that in its thematic and historical engrossments Kerouac’s writing is evidently proficient with postmodern approaches. It also traces the narrator’s search for spiritual enlightenment as portrayed in The Dharma Bums which engages with a discussion of Buddhism as a possible means of spiritual salvation. Having foregrounded the novel’s Buddhist concerns, t...
In Dharma Bums (1958), by Jack Kerouac, and Americana (1971), by Don DeLillo, the authors explore th...
The present study affirms that Jack Kerouac's individual narratives of his Duluoz Legend, as contain...
In Dharma Bums (1958), by Jack Kerouac, and Americana (1971), by Don DeLillo, the authors explore th...
In their quest to create an identity outside of what they saw as a materialistic and superficial soc...
This study aimed to examine and analyze the novel The Dharma Bums by Jack Kerouac based on the polit...
Jack Kerouac’s study of Buddhism started in earnest in 1953 and is traditionally believed ...
This study establishes a narrative that runs parallel with three Kerouac novels: On the Road, Vision...
A great American author, Jack Kerouac, loved the Eastern philosophy, Zen Buddhism, which influenced ...
In his novel The Dharma Bums, Jack Kerouac recounts his journey across the American landscape in the...
Called alternately the father of hip, King of the Beats, the daddy of the swinging psychedelic ...
Bent Sørensen Meat, Buddhism and Salvation. The beat-poet and novel writer Jack Kerouac sought ...
This examination of two of Jack Kerouac’s roman-á-clefs, On the Road (1957) and The Dharma Bums (195...
This examination of two of Jack Kerouac’s roman-á-clefs, On the Road (1957) and The Dharma Bums (195...
This paper emphasizes the influence Buddhism has on the works of the Beat Generation writers, espe...
The aim of the present study is to account for the significance of mobility in American culture and ...
In Dharma Bums (1958), by Jack Kerouac, and Americana (1971), by Don DeLillo, the authors explore th...
The present study affirms that Jack Kerouac's individual narratives of his Duluoz Legend, as contain...
In Dharma Bums (1958), by Jack Kerouac, and Americana (1971), by Don DeLillo, the authors explore th...
In their quest to create an identity outside of what they saw as a materialistic and superficial soc...
This study aimed to examine and analyze the novel The Dharma Bums by Jack Kerouac based on the polit...
Jack Kerouac’s study of Buddhism started in earnest in 1953 and is traditionally believed ...
This study establishes a narrative that runs parallel with three Kerouac novels: On the Road, Vision...
A great American author, Jack Kerouac, loved the Eastern philosophy, Zen Buddhism, which influenced ...
In his novel The Dharma Bums, Jack Kerouac recounts his journey across the American landscape in the...
Called alternately the father of hip, King of the Beats, the daddy of the swinging psychedelic ...
Bent Sørensen Meat, Buddhism and Salvation. The beat-poet and novel writer Jack Kerouac sought ...
This examination of two of Jack Kerouac’s roman-á-clefs, On the Road (1957) and The Dharma Bums (195...
This examination of two of Jack Kerouac’s roman-á-clefs, On the Road (1957) and The Dharma Bums (195...
This paper emphasizes the influence Buddhism has on the works of the Beat Generation writers, espe...
The aim of the present study is to account for the significance of mobility in American culture and ...
In Dharma Bums (1958), by Jack Kerouac, and Americana (1971), by Don DeLillo, the authors explore th...
The present study affirms that Jack Kerouac's individual narratives of his Duluoz Legend, as contain...
In Dharma Bums (1958), by Jack Kerouac, and Americana (1971), by Don DeLillo, the authors explore th...