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A formalist approach to Allen Ginsberg.Skowronek, Oscar. January 1970 (has links)
No description available.
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A formalist approach to Allen Ginsberg.Skowronek, Oscar. January 1970 (has links)
No description available.
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Structure and meaning in Ginsberg and Rauschenberg.Cheshire, Lorna Dean. January 1971 (has links)
No description available.
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Self-exploration and ecological consciousness in the poetry of Allen GinsbergSmits, Ronald Francis January 1978 (has links)
The present study examines Allen Ginsberg's poe7ryr, essays, and interviews from the point of view of two basic concepts, self and ecological consciousness. Through this approach the study both develops a concept of ecological consciousness that is based on Ginsberg's poetry, and. provides an illuminating understanding of that poetry. From that reading the present writer has identified five major characteristics of ecological consciousness. They are: 1. a consciousness of the oneness, wholeness, and mutual interdependence of all life; 2. a consciousness of tine ecological catastrophe present in the United States; 3. a consciousness and openness to the physical details of one's environment and one's self; 4. a consciousness of the mutual. interdependence of self and environment; 5.- a total rejection of American class society with its emphasis on competition, winning, success, hierarchy, superfluous work, and vicious power.The thesis of the study is that Ginsberg's poetry represents an ecologically sound effort to explore, accept, and disclose the self. His poetry serves as a model for both self-exploration and ecological consciousness. In fact, the present study suggests that ecological consciousness comes to exist only through self-exploration.The study follows in close detail Ginsberg's voyages into the self. The first chapter, "The Self Explored," charts the whole nature of the voyage by putting the self into perspective. This is done in two ways: by using the insights of psychologists, Abraham Maslow and Erich Fromm in particular, and by using the insights offered in Zen Buddhism through the essays of D. T. Suzuki, and insights about the self expressed in the Tao Te Ching. Chapter two, "Three Vows," attends to Ginsberg's political, visionary, and sexual selves as revealed in three vows that he has made. Chapter three, "Language and Self," presents a detailed examination of Ginsberg's use of language, particularly his openness to physical details and his extensive use of modification; this chapter also develops a relationship between his language characteristics on the one hand and self and ecological consciousness on the other. Chapter four, "Self-acceptance: the Sunflower Self," explores directly the theme of self-acceptance in his poetry and relates that theme to ecological consciousness. Chapter five, "Peak Experience," develops the connection between peak experiences in Ginsberg's life and poetry on the one hand and ecological consciousness on the other.The conclusion, "Ginsberg: Poet of Self and Ecological Consciousness," highlights tenderness, gentleness, and passiveness as the salient characteristics of his poetry and of the ecologically conscious person in his approach to life and living.
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Structure and meaning in Ginsberg and Rauschenberg.Cheshire, Lorna Dean. January 1971 (has links)
No description available.
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Allen Ginsberg's poetics as a synthesis of American poetic traditionsGéfin, Laszlo. January 1976 (has links)
No description available.
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Allen Ginsberg's poetics as a synthesis of American poetic traditionsGéfin, Laszlo. January 1976 (has links)
No description available.
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Confessions of a Western buddhist "Mirror-Mind": Allen Ginsberg as a Poet of the Buddhist "Void"Bellarsi, Franca January 2002 (has links)
Doctorat en philosophie et lettres / info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished
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Transgressing the last frontier : media culture, consumerism, and crises of self-definition in the works of Allen Ginsberg, Don DeLillo, and Chuck PalahniukBeaulieu, Pierre-Luc 23 April 2018 (has links)
Ce mémoire de maîtrise démontre la continuité du mythe de la frontière dans la littérature américaine produite après la Seconde Guerre mondiale et il identifie le concept d'hyperréalité de Jean Baudrillard en tant que nouvelle frontière américaine. L’hyperréalité désigne un monde produit par la simulation et le simulacre que la population perçoit comme étant réel. J’analyserai les poèmes « Howl » (1955), « A Supermarket in California » (1955) et « America » (1956) d'Allen Ginsberg ainsi que les romans Mao II de Don DeLillo (1991) et Survivor (1999) de Chuck Palahniuk afin d’expliquer de quelles manières chacune de ces œuvres dénonce le climat socio-culturel qui produit l’hyperréalité et comment, du même coup, celles-ci récupèrent des éléments du mythe de la frontière. L’organisation chronologique des chapitres me permet d’établir que l’hyperréalité a joué le rôle de nouvelle frontière dans la psyché américaine à partir des années 50 jusqu’à la fin des années 90. L’opposition dialectique entre un Ancien Monde corrompu et un Nouveau Monde utopique, un élément fondamental du mythe de la frontière, est au cœur de chacune des œuvres étudiées. De plus, dans chacune d'elles, le ou la protagoniste parvient à redéfinir le sens de sa réalité en traversant la frontière entre l’Ancien et le Nouveau Monde ce qui évoque la fonction d’autodétermination attachée à la frontière. L’argumentaire de ce mémoire repose sur la notion que l'hyperréalité correspond à l’Ancien Monde et que celle-ci voile l’existence possible d’un Nouveau Monde. Dans les œuvres de Ginsberg, DeLillo et Palahniuk que j’ai choisi d’analyser, la société américaine est assujettie à une hyperréalité qui est omniprésente. Dans cet Ancien Monde, la population s’identifie et se définie par rapport à des images et des produits à la fois fabriqués et célébrés par les médias et la culture de masse. Les protagonistes de ces auteurs s’opposent tous à l’idéologie conformiste et déshumanisante de la société de consommation. Je définis ce rejet comme une réactualisation du mythe de la frontière puisqu’il symbolise le passage entre un Vieux Monde hyperréel et un Nouveau Monde. Dans ce nouveau paradigme, les protagonistes de Ginsberg, DeLillo et Palahniuk sont en mesure d’affirmer leur individualité. / This thesis demonstrates the persistence of frontier mythology in post-WWII American literature and identifies Jean Baudrillard’s concept of hyperreality as the new American frontier. Hyperreality designates a world fabricated through simulation and simulacra that people have accepted as real. Through close-reading analyses of Allen Ginsberg’s poems “Howl” (1955), “A Supermarket in California” (1955), and “America” (1956) as well as Don DeLillo’s Mao II (1991) and Chuck Palahniuk`s Survivor (1999), I explain how the critiques of the socio-cultural climate that produces hyperreality present in each of these works recuperate elements of frontier mythology. My chapter organization allows me to establish the persistence of hyperreality as the new frontier in American consciousness from the 1950s to the late 1990s. The dialectical opposition between a corrupt Old World and a utopian New World, which is fundamental to frontier mythology, is central in each the studied works. Also, in each of them, crossing the frontier between the Old and the New World allows the protagonist to re-define the meaning of his/her reality according to his/her vision, which is evocative of the empowering function the frontier. This thesis is founded upon the idea that hyperreality corresponds to the Old World and, as such, that it veils the existence of a possible New World. The American society depicted in Ginsberg’s, DeLillo’s, and Palahniuk’s chosen works is one where hyperreality is omnipresent; in this Old World, individuals identify with images and products both fabricated and celebrated by media and consumer cultures. These authors’ protagonists all oppose the conformist and dehumanizing ideology such cultures endorse. This thesis conceptualizes their rejection as a re-actualization of frontier mythology that symbolizes their passage from the hyperreal Old World to the New World. In this new paradigm, the protagonists can then re-define themselves and their realities based on their own self-determined visions and ideals rather than on those disseminated in media and consumer cultures.
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Apocalyptic imagery in four twentieth-century poets : W.B. Yeats, T.S. Eliot, Robert Lowell and Allen GinsbergSarwar, Selim. January 1983 (has links)
In twentieth-century poets such as W. B. Yeats, T. S. Eliot, Robert Lowell and Allen Ginsberg, the literary apocalyptic--identifiable by its homology with the major elements of the biblical Apocalypse--undergoes progressively complex transmutations. While in the early Yeats the apocalyptic is evocative of earnest Romantic moods, in his later work it is complicated by irony, yoked to the cycles of Yeatsean history, and counteracted by exaggerated postures of defiance. In Eliot, a reductive juxtaposition of the apocalyptic and the contemporary foreshortens the traditional paradigms to a diminutive modern-day scale. In Lowell, the apocalyptic is manifested variously as a bitter inversion of American Puritan eschatology, the telescoping of the personal and the cosmic, and a catastrophe in slow-motion. The climactic point of distortion, however, is reached in Ginsberg's poetry in which apocalyptic horrors form a bizarre combination with humour and bathos. While their treatment of the eschatological is widely divergent, an element common to all four poets is their ambivalence towards the paradigms of an apocalyptic new world.
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