Countering the Counterculture: Rereading Postwar American Dissent from Jack Kerouac to Tomás Rivera

Countering the Counterculture: Rereading Postwar American Dissent from Jack Kerouac to Tomás Rivera

by Manuel Luis Martinez
Countering the Counterculture: Rereading Postwar American Dissent from Jack Kerouac to Tomás Rivera

Countering the Counterculture: Rereading Postwar American Dissent from Jack Kerouac to Tomás Rivera

by Manuel Luis Martinez

eBook

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Overview

Rebelling against bourgeois vacuity and taking their countercultural critique on the road, the Beat writers and artists have long symbolized a spirit of freedom and radical democracy. Manuel Martinez offers an eye-opening challenge to this characterization of the Beats, juxtaposing them against Chicano nationalists like Raul Salinas, Jose Montoya, Luis Valdez, and Oscar Acosta and Mexican migrant writers in the United States, like Tomas Rivera and Ernesto Galarza.
    In an innovative rereading of American radical politics and culture of the 1950s and 1960s, Martinez uncovers reactionary, neoromantic, and sometimes racist strains in the Beats’ vision of freedom, and he brings to the fore the complex stances of Latinos on participant democracy and progressive culture. He analyzes the ways that Beats, Chicanos, and migrant writers conceived of and articulated social and political perspectives. He contends that both the Beats’ extreme individualism and the Chicano nationalists’ narrow vision of citizenship are betrayals of the democratic ideal, but that the migrant writers presented a distinctly radical and inclusive vision of democracy that was truly countercultural.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780299192839
Publisher: University of Wisconsin Press
Publication date: 11/20/2003
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 368
File size: 500 KB

About the Author

Manuel L. Martinez is assistant professor in the Department of English at Indiana University. His novel Crossing was chosen as one 1998’s Best Books by Writers of Color by the PEN American Center. His most recent novel is called Drift.

Table of Contents

Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Dissent and the American Culture of Mobility
Part 1. The Roots of Postwar Dissent and the Counterculture
1. “No Fear Like Invasion”: Movement, Absorption, and Stasis Horror in the Beat Vision
2. “With Imperious Eye”: Kerouac's Fellaheen Western
3. Civitas and Its Discontents: The Lone Hunter Pleads the Fourth
Part 2. The Americano Narrative: Postwar Mexican American Dissent and Community
4. Historian with a Sour Stomach: Zeta's Americano Journey
5. Mapping el Movimiento: Somewhere between América and Aztlan
6. Arriving at el Pueblo Libre: The Insistence of Americanismo
Notes
Bibliography
Index
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