Jack Kerouac and The Beat Jack Kerouac were born on March 12, 1922 in Lowell, Massachusetts. After his brother Gerard died at the age of nine, Jack decided to become a writer. From his brother 's death' s life and death experience, and his childhood Catholic faith, he formed a spiritual tendency in his character who will last for his life. Keroroak is a spiritual "seeker" and may be the most important aspect of his life. Eisenhower in the United States, after the Second World War, Jack Kerorock came from a poor rural industrial world, transforming American culture. He recorded a wild rebellious culture called "Beats" at t.
Jack Kerouac created a beat generation, he wrote his name and became one of the poets / writers collapsed with Alain Ginsberg. When published on on-the-road, Kerouac found a new celebrity's identity. His sudden celebrity status may be one of the worst things he may have, his moral and spiritual decline in the coming years is shocking. In order to realize his wild image on On the Road, Kerouac acquired a harmful drinking habit, changed his natural luster, and aged him prematurely. Keroroak is very dissatisfied with his new life as a celebrity. His life ended at the age of 47 on October 21, 1969.
Jack Kerorock made the word "beat" in a conversation with Herbert Genk. Beat was originally used to describe the network of close friends of Keroroac composed of artists, writers, and criminals. In Keroroch, the word "striking" represents the concept that he and his friends were defeated by the government, beaten by the police, beaten by some regulatory authorities, and lost to the world of literature for a while I believe. Beet Kerorock, Ginsburg, Valles continue to keep the beat's rhythm to celebrate the true spirit of the lower classes, which is exactly that beat for them.
The importance of Dean Moriarty in Jack Kerouac's "On the Road" On Jack Kerouac 's On the Road, Dean Moriarty symbolizes the brilliance of the eternal youth used by the youth' s rebellious youth culture. He is not responsible, "I want to deal with the young man who is very excited about life ... living with those who do not pay attention to him" (Kerouac 4). Like Olympic Greeks, "use the torch ... to lighten heathens ... the work of Jack Kelowauck and Alan Kinsburg focused on Zen and Taoism in the East's idea from the late 1950s to the 1960s It can be explained in part by the perfection of these forms of thinking to Western ideals in the times fascinated by the thought of the Orient Denial of reality of Buddhism and the flow of Taoism's omission or life is 50. In the latter half, the revolutionary idea of consumerism and patriotism was cultivated.