This presentation details how in poems such as “A Meaningless Institution,” “Howl,” and “American Change” Allen Ginsberg depicts individuals striving as best they can to maintain their freedom, especially freedom of thought in the face of lockstep conformity. In doing so, they seek to hang onto and reassert their humanity. In virtually every line, Ginsberg’s ideas about free speech, democracy, patriotism, inclusiveness, the environment, and community collided with the dehumanizing ideals of mainstream Cold War America. Ginsberg’s reverence for the United States as celebrated by his artistic “father” Walt Whitman functions as the catalyst for him to protest what the United States of his time had become. Ginsberg’s poetry simultaneously chide...
Mention the name Allen Ginsberg and it is hard to resist the urge to drift back into the psychedelic...
This article discusses Czesław Miłosz’s ambiguous relationship with American beat and confessional p...
This dissertation examines Robert Lowell and Allen Ginsberg's personal poetry. While both poets atte...
Walt Whitman was an enormous influence on Allen Ginsberg, which Lawrence Ferlinghetti recognized at ...
Allen Ginsberg was one of the most influential poets of the Beat Generation, a group of writers whos...
Allen Ginsberg was born June 3, 1926, in Newark, New Jersey, and died April 5, 1997. He was raised i...
This dissertation has its first prompt in the common scholarly association between the two American ...
This thesis deals with some of Allen Ginsberg's most important poems as expressions of his political...
In his essay “The Poet,” Emerson called for the poet who would sing the burgeoning nation of the Uni...
The cultural role of Allen Ginsberg does not fit a typical Weberian model of charisma. The avant-gar...
Community of individuals Whitman embodied America Walt Whitman is one of the foundational figures ...
This article discusses Czesław Miłosz’s ambiguous relationship with American beat and confessional p...
Much work has been done to study the writings of Walt Whitman and Allen Ginsberg. Existing scholarsh...
This paper investigates the ambiguous process of Czesław Miłosz’s integration into America (both its...
Two books with two different audiences, Mark Edmundson\u27s Songs of Ourselves: Walt Whitman and the...
Mention the name Allen Ginsberg and it is hard to resist the urge to drift back into the psychedelic...
This article discusses Czesław Miłosz’s ambiguous relationship with American beat and confessional p...
This dissertation examines Robert Lowell and Allen Ginsberg's personal poetry. While both poets atte...
Walt Whitman was an enormous influence on Allen Ginsberg, which Lawrence Ferlinghetti recognized at ...
Allen Ginsberg was one of the most influential poets of the Beat Generation, a group of writers whos...
Allen Ginsberg was born June 3, 1926, in Newark, New Jersey, and died April 5, 1997. He was raised i...
This dissertation has its first prompt in the common scholarly association between the two American ...
This thesis deals with some of Allen Ginsberg's most important poems as expressions of his political...
In his essay “The Poet,” Emerson called for the poet who would sing the burgeoning nation of the Uni...
The cultural role of Allen Ginsberg does not fit a typical Weberian model of charisma. The avant-gar...
Community of individuals Whitman embodied America Walt Whitman is one of the foundational figures ...
This article discusses Czesław Miłosz’s ambiguous relationship with American beat and confessional p...
Much work has been done to study the writings of Walt Whitman and Allen Ginsberg. Existing scholarsh...
This paper investigates the ambiguous process of Czesław Miłosz’s integration into America (both its...
Two books with two different audiences, Mark Edmundson\u27s Songs of Ourselves: Walt Whitman and the...
Mention the name Allen Ginsberg and it is hard to resist the urge to drift back into the psychedelic...
This article discusses Czesław Miłosz’s ambiguous relationship with American beat and confessional p...
This dissertation examines Robert Lowell and Allen Ginsberg's personal poetry. While both poets atte...