Martin, William 2-14-97 Charter, Ann. Keroroac: Biography. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1959, 1994. 419 pages. Jack Kailua Krovac: Biography will help explain Jack Kerouac, the founder and the most important member of the beat movement, influenced by the rapidly changing culture of the 1950s. And then beetnik and hippie appeared from how Kaiyak lit the American social revolution and literary revolution.
Regarding Kairuyak, the myth of the author hides the reality of Kairuyak. In Ronna Johnson's "Let's Play": Post-Kerouac's appearance as a pioneering figure of Jack Keroroac and literary progress after the war "Sink of Keroouak" is a person before modernization, this work Shows a recent pattern and transformation of a very modern ideology with a neonatal postmodernism (Johnson 22-23). She acknowledges the influence of Kerouac and points out that. And composing technique - integration of African American culture and music style with normative European literature - shows his important position. "(Johnson 23) The influence of the war on American society and fierce generation writers, in particular Kelluk Kerorock, is neither a modernistic empress nor a late modern innovator, it is extreme and transient (Johnson 24 )
In a conversation between Jack Kerouac and his friend William S. Burroughs, Kerouac discussed the influence of his French Canadian identity on his writings. The majority of the literary criticisms on Kerouac's "streets" are based on the assumption that he is a typical American American. But this has a problem. Keroroac and his parents were part of the French-speaking Diaspora community that moved out of Quebec between 1880 and 1930. Keroroac is strongly aware of his double identity, including the Quebec and Americans. From the Diaspora community, the process of expressing this dual identity on the road and the process of finding relationships with countries that are not completely my own are summarized in "on the road" text.