Monday, 6 February 2012

Mainstreaming #pomo

The Gallery Practices class at the University of Western Ontario is putting on their yearly exhibition! This year's concept--The Hipster and Social Media. The Beat Generation will be featured within the exhibition! Come see it, or tune back into the blog to see updates and pictures from the show! 

Mainstreaming #pomo will be held in the Artlab Gallery at UWO. Opening night will be March 8, 2012 at 5:00pm and the show will run till March 22, 2012! Hope to see all you bloggers and readers there! 

RSVP on the right side of this page!


Friday, 3 February 2012

And The Beat Goes On

Take a look at this video as it traces the Beat Generation's greatest writers and their influence on music in the decades following their reign.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uKRBQG6zUWo

Monday, 30 January 2012


The Beat Generation and the Modern Hipster
An Essay by Arielle Martin

The search for identity and the fight for freedom from the mainstream defined the 1950’s Beat generation and travelled from that era and landed itself in the centre of the hipster ideology, manifesting itself in today’s American youth. The movement began in 1948 with a group of friends, a small social circle of post World War II writers and poets, clad in black with thick, dark rimmed glasses, and a defiant position against mainstream American society. It took one man to put a name to their doctrine, their new way of life after the war, and suddenly a movement was born. Jack Kerouac deemed himself, and his friends, the Beat Generation.[1] For Kerouac and his friends at Columbia University in New York, where it began, the term ‘beat’ was riddled with contradiction. It represented social marginalization, yet it was a blessing. It defined a group of ‘beaten down’ people, yet it represented enthusiasm and an idealized means of being.[2] It labeled a generation coming out of a war and The Great Depression, who liberated themselves sexually and spiritually[3]. The meaning of the word ‘beat’ may be obscure, but to those involved it evoked a true clarity. It represented individual rawness and weariness of “being undramatically pushed up against the wall of oneself.”[4] Kerouac and his friends became the inspiration, and the creators, of a movement that would sweep mid 20th century America, through literature that opposed censorship, formalities, and took risks[5].  It became a rejection of middle-class values, a rejection of the purposelessness that American modern society had become after the war, and the realization that they could forge their own path. Through the writings and documentations primarily by Jack Kerouac, Neal Cassady, Allen Ginsberg, and William Burroughs, a cultural and literary legacy was left behind.[6]
The Beats, or Beatniks, represented undeniable individuality and spontaneity. Jack Kerouac and his Beatniks opposed the ideas of conformity and collectivity, having been born into the collective conditions of a depression and raised amidst the collectivity of a global war. Seemingly lost in a new world of consumerism and submission to materialistic values, this postwar generation of the 1950’s stood in opposition to the culture that tried to consume them. However, beneath their anti-conformity, their informal literary style, and beyond their conscious opposition, is a pursuit; a pursuit of new values, a quest for identity and placement in a world of disorientation, and a search for ecstasy in the dreary world that Jack Kerouac, his peers and friends, and the post-war writers and poets in New York City, were raised into.[7] The typical World War II veteran came home after the war, got married, and blindly bought into the mainstream American dream. The Beats did not. Since they saw themselves as having nothing to loose, the Beats sought a kind of freedom that could not be bought. It was a freedom that Kerouac and Cassady found on America’s highways as they travelled them aimlessly throughout the 1950’s. They hunted new territories and fought for a new kind of lifestyle. To the conformists of American culture, the Beats were a wild and threatening group of individuals, yet amongst it all, they were inspiring.[8]
The Beat generation became an inspiration to later generations of youth throughout the second half of the 20th century in America. Today, another group of people, a modern Beatnik has arisen– the hipster. In an undeniable search for ‘cool’, the hipster’s today possess the same anti-conformist, anti-consumer ideals of the aging Beatniks. They are a counter-culture possessing a state of mind that values independent thinking and an appreciation for creativity. They are the pioneers of new trends in fashion and music, and the leaders of rejection and rebellion towards the mainstream consumers. For the Beatniks and the contemporary hipster, life was unsteady and unpredictable. According to George Cotkin, “the Beat or Hipster was open to experimentation and lived, or sought to live, for the intrinsic fullness of each moment”.[9] However, the hipsters today are similarly defined by a contradiction the way the definitions of ‘beat’ were. The hipster, in his or her quest for resistance to mainstream, actually ends up conforming to the doctrine of an ever-growing materialistic subculture, which ends up forming its own society on the edges of the mainstream.
The Beatniks were a group of creative geniuses. The written word became a tool for them to define themselves as free and independent, such as Kerouac’s ‘On The Road’, a documentation of his road trips through America with Neal Cassady. Today, one- liner twitter updates and short form statuses on our social media portals has replaced the value of the written word. Western society condenses and accelerates the human interaction. The experience of the Beatniks was about close friends coming together to utilize literature and poetry to express their new, spontaneous way of life. Today, modern hipsters operate in a cyber space as opposed to the physical social space of the past. The modern hipster and the Beatniks of the 1950’s may praise the same principles regarding identity and separation from the mainstream, but their tools for spreading their values have drastically changed. The hipster’s today have the power of the Internet. However, this in fact may end up challenging them instead of helping. As the Internet praises connectivity and worldwide accessibility, the subculture of hipsterism is now becoming mainstream due to the masses that can participate. The Beats were a smaller, identifiable group of individuals with a clear motive. Today, the hipster philosophy has the ability to span much greater territory, and dips dangerously into the mainstream culture they try to avoid.
The Beatniks, social media, and hipsterism are all reminiscent of the concept of identity. Their means may overlap, but they also stand in contrast. The value and use of the written word may be compromised by today’s youth, something that was praised during the reign of the Beat generation. Regardless, the Beat legacy lives on, as it survives in its modern adaptation—the hipster.


Sunday, 29 January 2012

Did You Know....?

Did you know that the Beatles spelled their name with an 'a' instead of a double 'e' because they wanted to incorporate the word 'beat' into their name?


It was a direct reference to the Beat Generation!




Did you know that Allen Ginsberg, the prominent writer of the Beat Generation and legendary singer Bob Dylan were good friends?





Did you know that Jim Morrison considers Jack Kerouac one of his biggest influences?


Saturday, 28 January 2012

The Glasses Never Die

If you were hopeful that the thick rimmed glasses would rest in peace after the 1950's Beat Generation trade marked them as 'cool', then look no further.. because they are back. The hipster's today wear those thick black glasses with pride, and as a defining stylistic element to their hipster chic ensemble.
Read what Dave Schilling, featured on Thought Catalog, had to say about it!




Friday, 27 January 2012

Beatniks and the Roots of Hipsters

An article written by Noah Cicero..


"The modern hipster has its roots in the Beatniks, or mainly the top three Beatniks: Jack Kerouac, Allen Ginsberg and William S. Burroughs. I would like to focus on their social values and not their art exactly."
-Noah Cicero

Click the link to read the article!