Alan Ginsberg's US "Alan Ginsberg" United States criticized the unilateral discussion of the United States angrily. In this poem, the United States is personified and is called as human by speakers. After speaking to the United States, the reader raised a number of rhetorical questions to think about American morality and values and to question their goals and ambitions. In essence, the speaker presents an unquestioning question that the reader, neither him nor the US can answer.
In "the United States," the author acknowledges in January 1956 written by Allen Ginsberg "I am addicted to Time magazine, I read it every week" (Ginsberg 46-47). For this reason, I chose the No. 24 LXVI issued on December 12, 1955, and showed the impact of domestic and world events at Ginzberg at the time. The cover of the question draws lucky St. Nick in the shining head of the toy maker Louis Marx. This pleasing picture shows how the media is confronted with difficulties such as nuclear weapons and cheering threats to abolition countries of racial discrimination in countries like Slow Motion, which is trying to spread happiness and Christmas to these countries .
American reading by Alan Ginsberg is a physical experience. Or, rather, that half. In the satire that won the award of the beat generation poet, in Ginsberg upside down again the collective heart, seeking the nature and nuance of belonging to the return point of the view - choosing - or otherwise exceeding the significance of the coalition Take the national identity as a self-population and inherent tension between personality and affiliation - case study. Ginsberg talked in the first line as follows. "I dedicated you to America, I do not have anything now, and if I look at his country from a foreign perspective, he will not hesitate to give up his role for my country Told.
Allen Ginsberg was called by Bob Dylan. "It had the greatest influence on the voice of American poetry since Whitman," Ginsberg is his biggest fan. A typical representative of Alan Ginsberg is "the United States", but it is getting longer and longer. Allen Ginsbergs' poetry is characterized by a long story of a conversational or monolingual type, completely different from the style of general poetry. He uses the full names of people and often devotes poetry to certain people. Usually ordinary, everyday things - like going to Chinatown - he wrote something exactly that he gave them a funny point of view - usually political cynical or sexual - Lenkinsberg's work, why people dislike love. His work is often like a skilfully structured diary like a little recitation diary instead of poetry and there is a little dialogue with poetry.