Excellent video. In 1979, when I was 19, I flew on Laker Airways from UK to New York and hitchhiked across the USA as far as Seattle and down into Mexico. That's how much Kerouac influenced my life. I still cherish the memories of that trip.
Sounds great, I did the same in 83, but went North to Canada for some reason. It's sad that no-one hitchhikes any more, it was a great way of meeting people.
I hitched up & back California in my teens 1970s til 84, haven't hitched since, definitely learned things about myself, like when I was picked up by pervo creeps I kept my calm, detached, while I plotted my move to get away, if they made a weird move I was going to rob them, take their car, a feeling like a stone door would close over my heart while I coldly appraised a situation, if they hadn't backed off I'm certain they would have ended up tied up in the trunk of their car, I didn't know I had that coldness in me, maybe it was reaction to soul-less predators, but they must have sensed my survival instincts cuz they backed off..
I did it in 95 but in a 1988 Chrysler New Yorker with a friend, no money and a trunk stuffed full of nothing but hundreds of CDs and books. Somehow we made it from Pittsburgh to LA and back. Took us 5 weeks. Although I have done some great hitch hiking around Northern California and beyond. I consider that road trip my Kerouac trip.
I loved Kerouac in high school, then stopped reading him. In my mid 30s, I picked up "On the Road" in a bookshop and started reading random passages and realized quickly how much the book shaped my consciousness. Thanks for the video. I loved it.
@@edcottingham1 Man, did I ever resonate with Holden Caulfield in high school...and today. Holden called people phonies. Today, I see it as falsehood and quite different from ignorance where intention becomes the benchmark. In so many ways, 2024 is much more difficult to navigate.
I found On the Road and Easy Rider very inspirational as a young man. I bought motorcycles and traveled back and fourth between the coast of the U. S. I still love the look of this country. Thanks for the nice summation of Kerouac. I've read a few of the books and enjoyed them all, during my college years I took a class on Beat Literature, which was lots of fun. Thanks again for posting!
Life long Kerouac reader your detailed research and narrative analysis of Kerouac's life and work in such a short space was exemplary and superb. Thank you.
I live in Saint Petersburg, Florida, where Jack spent the last few years of his life. He has become quite an icon here in the city. The flamingo bar on mlk, where he used to hang out regularly, has become quite a shrine to him, and they have events throughout the year in celebration of him. Recently, his last remaining house that he owned while living here was made into a historical landmark, and I'm proud to say that I was one of the local voices that led to it being made into that.
I've never read Kerouac, but have known his background story, especially around Neal Casady..I had no idea he had spent time in St Petersburg, where I visit my sister every year..I will look up The Flamingo..Do you know where the Cactus bar was?..
Have you ever heard the stories the Jack's ghost lives on in Haslem's book store? It's said that from time to time the workers in the book store will come in to work and all of Jack's books will have been rearranged on the shelves.
With 1.4 thousand comments here i doubt mine will ever be read but I am moved to express my two cents nonetheless. I possess and have read a number of Kerouac bios, same with most all of his books including posthumous releases of his writings. Jack's writings have been and continue to be a source of pleasure, amazement, intrigue, inspiration, creativity, provocation of my senses, wonder, appreciation , hunger for raw experience, desire to explore the back alleys the underbelly of society, a craving to uncover the surface of people places things--- I was a Verb seeking the meaning inside all nouns... And in my earlier life I did just that, same as so many of you did. The music of the '60's & '70's was to me what jazz bebop was to Jack I also delved into the jazz of his time and the artists he named in his books and dug it intensely as i still do. The influence of jazz on his writing style and purpose and efforts he writes about often and plainly states in the beginning of Mexico City Blues. I have read widely and deeply in poetry and literature and appreciate many writers and have a deep fondness and even love for many as I recognize the gifts they possessed -- including the ones driven by their mania or their melancholy, their fears their terrors, their angst cravings, their visions and voices, their hunger for grace their courting of darkness and death, their turning the stuff off life in nature and the nature of being human the stuff of storms in the sky and storms in their heads and hearts and turning all this into ART, poetry, literature, painting, sculpture, and innumerable other ways of creating. The word poetry in Greek means "To Make". As a poet myself, Kerouac remains a constant and a touchstone from my very early years, always bringing me a secret smile of appreciation for the force he released into the world through his one-of-a-kind expressions of jazz-like brilliance inscribed on the page his words like musical notes spontaneously creating unspeakable visions Blake-like and Bird-like compositions in his poems his sketches and his many books compiled together as the Legend of Duluoz. Farewell and feel the spirit!
Probably the best documentary of Jack Kerouac ever been made! It was very pleasurable to listen to and watch! I have the most stimulating 30 minutes for a long time. Thanks very much!
✅ Excellent. ----------------------- I once went to a Film Fest, but (2) very genuine people were there - with INSIGHT into the French aspects of Kerouac. (+) They had the DOCUMENTATION, to back-it-up. ------------- Nonetheless, this gentleman's work is excellent. ✔️ DETROIT ✔️ the WIVES; and exactly HOW...they figured in his (narcissistic) Life. America and ALCOHOLISM. 💣the Military and The WAR, Labeled it SHELL SHOCK ( treatment). Making it ACCEPTABLE. --------- The Professor analysis WAS CORRECT. I have been in White Trash, Republican, SOCAL for (8) years. Knew-of (10) alcoholics. ☠️☠️☠️☠️☠️☠️☠️☠️ (8) are DEAD. #9...was 'dragged' to expensive DETOX. At Age (70). Two Years LATER..., that weak PIG, returned to Alcohol; ...and probably Meth, 🗣️ "...Pearls before SWINE.." 😩.... Whining, begging...CRYING...(pathetic) 🗣️"...I don't want to...DIE..". 🟨 DRAMA....COWARD..." ....Wastes...everybody's...TIME. .... another LIEING, Manipulative.... A L C O H O L I C. ➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖
On the Road. The most influential book of my youth. It completely drove my 20s and early 30s. Train hoppin, hitchhiking, drinking, falling in and out of love. Ups and downs it was all a blast. Another beat.
Im Brazilian … Kerouac is my heroes too ! When I read on the road change my life I was 22. Now I’m 58 and still thinking about Cassidy ! Jack was libertarian for me leaving in agriculture in south Brazil… now I’m live in London.. but I’m still have the vision I got from him ! Thanks I love you video !
Im 32 and bored with society. I love reading comments like yours that show other Jack fans were inspired to create their own adventures. I fantasize about living in my car and traveling acrosss the US
I am one I was there in the early sixties and wrote poetry and short quirky stories. I have completed two books. One is on the internet and been complimented.@@professorgraemeyorston
... 🙋🏻♂️ triggered a million road trips into western USA I lived in Denver for a time go to My Brother's Bar great cheeseburgers and sandwiches and an unpaid signed tab from Jack Kerouac and Neil Cassidy posted by the bathrooms one of my favorite Denver haunts 😎👍🏽🏔️
Thank you once again, this is a clearer analysis of this famed character than any others I came across…plunging into this beatnik culture as a foreign student in the 60‘s when Kerouac was an idol, I was most astonished and baffled, thanks for further clearing up his personal story in your video.
Thanks Prof- I enjoyed watching that; I was an 18 y-o ‘student’ in Paris in 1961, and Kerouac and Ginsburg were very much part of our young lives - I still remember the cover of On the Road with Kerouac and Dean Cassidy; when I got back I had to write away to import Bob Dylan and Nina Simone records cos you couldn’t get them. Happy memories of a mis-spent but not wasted youth 🙃
Dr.Yorston, my parents were neighbors of Jack in St.Pete.My dad was a Beatnik and great admirer. He would mow Jack's lawn and then they would sit in the yard drinking beer. When I was 2 ( a few years after his death) I wondered off and Stella found me and played with me in the front yard until my parents came looking for me.
I served 4 years in the Army after college, then went into medical sales. I read "On the Road" and it resonated so strongly with me! My favorite book of all time. I quit my sales job and moved to Charleston SC to go to Dental School. Jack Kerouacs book was the main reason to pick up roots completely in my life. The Electric Koolaid Acid Test is also another favorite. I just loved that "genre"
Truman Capote famously referred to On the Road as not being writing, but "typewriting". Yes, I believe Jack was a loner who didn't enjoy being alone. This may have been part of his struggle. His main flaw for me was not taking responsibility, especially for himself and his life choices. With this said, I love his writings. You seem to miss that most of his works were meant to be free form word jazz. He adored Bebop jazz and musicians such as Dizzy Gillespie and Charlie Parker, and I think he tried to emulate them with his use of words. You do mention his readings with Steve Allen, this is what he was all about. Close your eyes and listen to "The moon her majesty". Simply beautiful. Free flowing.
I tried reading Big Sur and I just couldn't finish it. I liked the beginning, but for me it became too incoherent towards the middle of the book. Addiction runs in my family and it began to remind me of family members who would start off okay in conversation, but then go on and on about nothing.
That truman capote quote is sour grapes. I've read almost every Kerouac book he's put out but I haven't read anything of Capote. I'm not saying he's a bad writer (see how easy that is, capote?) but I haven't yet found a reason to concern myself with his books
@@sunkintree I'm actually going to start reading some Capote, after seeing him on an old David Letterman show I saw recently from 1982. Did you know Capote was the person that Harper Lee based the character "Dill" on in her book "To Kill A Mockingbird?" They were childhood friends. All of these writers did outstanding important work.
Great overview of Jack, his 'lives' & characters. I read On the Road back in the late 60s during my high-school years & having listened to your dissection, there are quite a few similarities which I share with Jack. I too have tasted from the many aspects of life & for over 40 years, preferred the company of my cats, music, art & various writings, poems, observations & stor8es, than the busy gathering spots, which so many are attracted to. No chemical dependency has ever chained me down, even though I enjoyed flirting with a number of them. In today's world, the often vacuous friendships which abound, hold no interest for me, so life has prepared me well in coping with excluding those who add nothing of true value to my learning on this 'Road of Life'. I wish you you all a safe & interesting journey on your's. Just don't waste precious time on worthless endeavours. Check everything out, but abandon that which drains you. 😊❤
This is a great summation of Kerouac’s personality and life, a commendable job by the Professor. Personally I have come to see Kerouac as a truly tragic figure on the Greek scale. You have touched on his impulsiveness in quitting the Columbia football team which seems like a narcissistic injury. Then there is the promiscuity and ease in how he used people such as his first wife who bailed him out of jail in NYC. I have been under his spell and read most of his books more than once, done even thrice. I have read multiple biographies of him by his contemporaries and by scholars. I’ve also known some of the same people he knew. I’ve read the other beats and gone to hear them read. My conclusion is that Kerouac’s life and works describe the loss of innocence for the boomer generation. Growing up in the 1960’s was not easy. But of course it was his rebellion that inspired. Kerouac tried to show a way of living in reckless abandon of normal values and higher enlightenment. In the end I feel that the scourge of addiction, sociopathy and mindlessness in his hero worship of the antisocial Neal Cassady has wrought a huge scar on my generation. It was the scar of living and loving without a conscience. I don’t blame him though, Kerouac remains a hero to me at least a prosaic one.
Aside from everything else i'm still baffled by the shear readability of his work. It just seems to read itself and wash over you, much like the bebop he loved so much.
Very interesting take on Jack's writing style . I read 'On the Road' in a short time , and I found that it did indeed carry you along . The climax of the book in a Mexican whorehouse seemed fitting .
Thank you, professor Graeme, for the in-depth review of Kerouac’s body of work and his life. Your video shows how much effort and creativity you’ve put into making it. I greatly enjoyed this piece!
This is excellent. Most of the beat videos on youtube are mashups of existing footages and stories, repetitive and more clickbait for the author's than trying to contribute anything new to the beat and Kerouac understanding. However, this offers a big trove of content you probably haven't seen before, both in the narrative and also in the visuals. This is excellent.
Kerouac found me, I didnt find him, as said by many who have been swept up by his genius. Ken Kesey once described the Grateful Dead in a way that I would describe Kerouac. Dead fans are willing to sit through a lot of mediocre or even bad music until you get to that one moment, where it pops and everything makes sense and you feel nothing but pure joy. This was Kerouac. If you could handle his meandering you would eventually get to a point of pure astonishment at the combination of narrative and poetry. He was an icon for sure, larger than life and unable to handle his fame. I like the way you point this out and I think this happens to some famous people, which is understandable. There is a lot of pressure to live up to the stature of defining a generation. Bob Dylan struggled with similar things. He didn't want to be the leader of a movement, he really just wanted to be an artist with some really poignant things to say. I think Kerouac felt the same, but he was exalted. I liked your portrayal. I appreciated the academic quality of it but I am sure you can understand that there is side to this man that is hard to capture in documentary form. You have to feel it to truly understand it. I dont think his work helped me become who I am, but it definitely helped shape the final product. I still read him today as I have yet to find any author who delights me like Kerouac. Thank you
Absolutely, I think it is impossible to convey the power of great art by talking about it, you have to experience it, whether it be writing or visual art.
I don't get your comparison to Kesey's comment on Grateful Dead shows. I've read many, if not all, of Kerouac 's books, and all the ones I've read are excellent.
This is quite an excellent presentation. I was a Kerouac freak in my college years in the mid-1980s and read everything that had been published about him at that time. Most of it was still fairly hagiographic. More decades have allowed us all to look at Kerouac more objectively. As a Psychology teacher, I particularly appreciated the updated speculations on Kerouac’s psychological profile, which make a lot of sense and also help explain Kerouac’s greatness as well as his limitations as a literary figure.
Thank you, Professor Yorston, your presentation explained a great deal. After reading "On the Road," I felt disappointed. It left me feeling unhinged. I can't remember the exact year, but it was definitely after university when I read the novel. In addition to the regular curriculum of the Catholic high school I attended, I read Sartre, Camus, Selby and Salinger before I graduated. Much to the chagrin of the religious instructors, who threatened to confiscate these books in study hall. None of those authors ever affected me negatively the way Kerouac did. I understood the stream of consciousness device. But Kerouac made me feel uneasy. As a result, I never had any desire to seek out his other works. Chuck in Northern New England
Oh Mr. Jack kerouac. I drove around the west for the most part thinking about his prophetic life and efforts that were great in my opinion. In the 1990s when I wrote a song about him, I didn't know Neal did all the driving? He was still a brilliant star to me. I've read several books about him too. Thanks.
Thanks Graeme for another intriguing and insightful review... The beat was another cog in our offbeat addiction to music and literature, and film in the 60's and 70's...We were blessed to have so much to immerse ourselves.
Thanks Professor! I really don't enjoy Kerouac (his selfishness overwhelms me) but I appreciate your talent for making these biographies so I can learn about why he was the way he was.
@@professorgraemeyorstonSeems to me that Cassidy was the selfish one...example: leaving a very ill Kerouac in Mexico to fend for himself while Cassidy returned to the states to get some ( earthy description)
I read both "On the Road" and "Dharma Bums" while I myself was in the military. I understand why Jack thought, and was upset about, the Beat Movement being misunderstood. When you read a Kerouac book, and then look at Ginsberg, you can see two different trains going in two different directions. I tried the other stuff like "Naked Lunch", but it just didn't take in me. But, Kerouac's words, to this day, some thirty years later, still conjure up mental images in my head. I don't remember the words, but I remember his memories. In the end, I think Jack had a fatal case of existentialism and nihilism. Death was probably the only release.
Absolutely great. I knew a lot about Kerouac from reading him, and general interest. This was a masterly description and analysis of Jack. It was Truman Capote who said > >that's not writing it's typewriting < ... Well, I can still pick up " On the Road" and have a huge emotional attachment. I also felt kin to Jack Kerouac in that I was a moody and angry alcoholic drinker for most of my life > Now a moody and angry non-drinker,
One of the more satisfying pieces of content I have watched in recent times. Sadly many contributers on the internet these days are more interested in themselves as presenters rather than in their subject matter. But here the subject matter - Jack Kerouac - is front and centre. Beautifully put together, rich with information in language that does not try unnecessarily to draw attention to itself, this video is interesting from beginning to end. Thank you very much Professor. I have subscribed.
I have been reading Kerouac and books about him for the past 54 years. I am really impressed by this video because it encapsulated so many of Kerouac's highlights from his complex life. Well done indeed professor! Steve Mehl retired clinical psychologist
Kerouac is one of my favorite authors. On The Road introduced me to a style writing that was new to me. Jack was a complex individual but a very real one. I have read about a half dozen of his books of which 'Dharma Bums' is my favorite. What I loved about Jack is that he actually LIVED those experiences, not intellectualized or dreamed about. Kerouac was complex, but an icon.
Thank you for this! I read on the road as a young man many years ago and took off hitchhiking as soon as I finished it! The road took to where I am now ...many decades later, and I re-read on the road a few years ago and was surprised and ashamed to realize how PG the novel seemed! The inspiration it first gave me was so hard to find again....but non the less, I'm grateful for reading books, traveling , and God damn I REALLY miss high jinx
I really enjoyed the psychoanalysis of his literature and life. I also concluded that he was somewhat in the spectrum of narcissistic tendencies and felt he was driven by his shaping experiences of shame, negative core beliefs or not being lovable He compensated by grandiose delusions that never satisfied his wanderlust. He’s also highly relatable to people who just want to be accepted but can’t accept themselves, a human condition.
Kerouac defined the beat generation, and taught many outcasts and discontents, including myself, how to live in a world that doesn’t give a damn about us. I love that man.
@@Damien8888not saying I agree that he did, but if he did, that doesn't mean Kerouac didn't. Jack also beat him to it, since on the road came out 2 years before anything Bukowski published. I think that if Bukowski gave a voice to any forgotten, it was a different forgotten.
@@matthewatwood8641 “Like anybody can tell you, I am not a very nice man. I don't know the word. I have always admired the villain, the outlaw, the son of a bitch. I don't like the clean-shaven boy with the necktie and the good job. I like desperate men, men with broken teeth and broken minds and broken ways. They interest me. They are full of surprises and explosions. I also like vile women, drunk cursing bitches with loose stockings and sloppy mascara faces. I'm more interested in perverts than saints. I can relax with bums because I am a bum. I don't like laws, morals, religions, rules. I don't like to be shaped by society.” ― Charles Bukowski, South of No North
Great presentation of a complicated man. He has fascinated me since I can remember, especially his friendship with Cassady, whose connection to Jerry Garcia is legendary. Neal was everything Jack wasn't able to be, as is often the case. I often wonder how different Jack and his writing would have been, had they never met. Such abstract and influential cats. They will never stop fascinating me. Thanks for a stirring video to bring it all back.
I was going through an Air Force technical school in Denver when I read this book. I was 18 and it inspired me to seek out adventures on Larimar Street when it was still the rundown area, not some yuppie hangout. I left there in June, 1965 on a Greyhound bus heading to St Louis. When I got on the bus, I found a seat next to a young Mexican woman who was leaving her husband. We talked all the way to St Louis and to this day I regret letting her continue to Ohio. It was a Keroauc experience. I later would hitchhike thousands of miles looking for adventure.
You were probably at Lowry AFB in Denver (?) In those days, airmen would congregate at the downtown corner of Broadway and Colfax . . . and people would give them lifts back to the base in east Denver. A way of life that is long gone now . . .
So nice of you to “let” that woman live her life & make her own choices as an individual in this life, as opposed to treating her as an object of conquest, as Kerouac saw many people in this life.
Excellent video! I never read anything of Kerouac, but was always curious. Your style of narrating, is composed, without drama and you let the story speak for itself. I hope to catch more of your videos. Thank you!
Thank you for a really good mini biog of Kerouac, I have been a fan of his since the mid 60’s when I first discovered him, ‘On The Road’ changed my life, it completely redirected me, I hitch-hiked across Europe and Asia soon after (you are so right, what a pity people no longer travel this way), in the 80’s I drove NY to LA via Denver tracing some of his travelling and I have friends who had met him and I have also discussed Neal with some of those who knew him. Some of the experiences and relationships I have had with American women have reflected much of that culture, not always in a comfortable way, now 60 years later, I regret none of it. However I will admit that the more I learned about him the more I realized he was a deeply flawed man but still an incredibly influential one, in many ways the man of the time.
Again, for 30 minutes to cover his life so well quite amazing and faultless. I think Big Sur was somehow his best work. But please keep your channel going, it can only go from strength to strength. Thank you .
He was a big hit with me in high school and college. Became a freind with mike perkins who lived with alan watts on a house boat in sausalito...great days. days
Big Sur is a dank, oppressive nightmare of a book but the journey is worthwhile. It has more to teach than On The Road. Good choice for best work I say
Great video. I ran into the Dharma Bums by a hippie English Teacher right after High School. I can say assuredly that my life path immediately changed. I only read the Dharma Bums, but the Beatniks got a hold of me for a short while.
History has a way of sort of putting cultural icons into perspective, seeing value where it exists but also the dead end of trying to self medicate and the “it’s better to burn out than fade away” ethic.
I cannot believe that I was just speaking about him with a friend.....we both went away to "look up" some information...and here...the good Professor gives us this!
On the Road changed many generations. I read it and it spoke to me. I'm also from the east of usa and the west was calling to me so I went. I can only imagine how many people were inspired to do the same. Dharma Bums is a good one too. But On the Road was the one for me. Thanks for the video. Well done.
Nice work professor. I have noted the influence of Thomas Wolfe in Kerouac's work. But Tom Wolfe was under the influence of Tuberculin Mycobacterium in the right side of his brain. I also appreciate your mention of alcoholism in the French Canadian population. This is the saddest of conditions.
the professor doesn't say that about the French Canadians, but he does mention Jack Kerouac and his alcoholism. My father was was Catholic French Canadian who died of alcoholism. I met Jan Kerouac at an AA meeting. the statistics are that the French are very prone to alcoholism, whether it be in France or Quebec. @@BarryHart-xo1oy
Very enlightening info thank you for this! I had found snippets about his life that never made sense but what you’ve done here makes sense of not only the man himself but also explains how that writing style of his was birthed. Well done!
My father played High School football with Jack. He didn't think much of his skill. Maybe bc my father's coach always referred to (my father) as "that Greek boy." He didn't think much of his writings either, but I did. I really liked the book and have read it several times. I too took the wrong message that he claims many did. I did my share of sex, drugs, and rock 'n roll. Disagreed with the Vietnam War, but went in the Army anyway. My wayward friends and I really adored his sense of freedom. I was also a loner, but with friends. I read many beat writers. I'm 77 now and I miss those days, but I feel my generation, the Boomers, brought a certain negativity to this country. This was a great biography. I enjoyed it immensely. Thank you!!
Maybe because of the beat generation and the hippies after them the baby boomer generation was pushed away from traditional American values of faith , marriage and hard work that were the strength of the WW 2 generation . I shocked a lot of people when I joined the US Army as a hippie kid in 1974 , but Vietnam was over for us , and my upbringing and schooling was the last of the patriotic type for the boomers . 10 years later , the kids were much different than I was .
Society has changed in all countries, there was plenty that was wrong with the pre-war era that is now better, but a lot of the good stuff has also been lost along the way.
@@leadwithgreeneconomySome of just grew old still holding many of the values of our youth dear; others turned into their parents becoming co-opted into a culture they once despised.
You really are an exquisite storyteller. I’m so happy to have stumbled upon your channel. I appreciate that you treat each subject with the humanity and compassion that each of us deserves.
Kerouac was one of America's greatest writers to date. Previously to watching this video I had never heard of Prof. Yorston. Likely, I never will again.
I just began to read 'On The Road' again, and I also love 'Babydriver' an autobiography from his daughter Jan, who just like her father, had an amazing photographic memory..! That book is one big wild ride, and she wasn't only the daugher of Jack but also of her mother Joan, a lovely eccentric and extravert woman. Jan's personality is a lot like her mom's and she's got her lust for adventure and traveling probably from her dad (maybe also from his books) 'Babydriver' begins somewhere in South America where Jan (16 yrs.) lives with a guy in the jungle, she's 8,9 months pregnant, and from then on the book becomes this fantastic wild ride from her early youth in Harlem (NY) to all kinds of different places. She's got great personality and great intellect, lots of humour, and she didn't see using heroin as a low period but enjoyed the trip (I did too. There's enough people who function fine cause they don't use much & who are using for many years. They work a normal day job and no one knows cause they function fine) Jan Kerouac was an amazing woman and I wish Jack would have known her better. In that book she said that she only met him once (I believe when she was 8 yrs. old) and he looked astonished when he met her, cause she looked a lot like him while he always believed that she was from another guy.
My dad was Jack Kerouac, (real name Dennis Hotte) but lived the same life as Jack. He was born in 1924 and passed away Dec. 12, 2023, 2 months before his 100th birthday! My dad traveled the country at least 40 times. He was born in Holyoke MA, his mom and dad from Canada, and I was born in CA.1955, what a long, strange trip it's been!
@@fiwalker6690read the comment again, Jack did not die in 2023. He said his dad was Jack, but then said he lived the same life as Jack. So it's not his son, he never had a son
Thank you for yet another informative and comprehensive documentary. I used to love Kerouac when I was a teen. As Internet was not widely available during the early 90s, I was not aware of his bio and all the not-so-flattering details. As a result, watching your documentary about him gave me a bitter-sweet feeling. It's interesting how the less likable of us can leave such gems behind. Looking forward to your next upload! My suggestion, if not covered already, would be Charles Baudelaire. 😊
I have always wanted to read On the Road, now i definitely will. I really enjoyed your intelligent analysis and your sympathy for the alcoholic. Sadly, so many "writers" engage with the fantasy that intoxicants can liberate their creativity, when the opposite is usually the case. For every Hemingway, there are a hundred poets whose creativity burnt out in an alcoholic haze.
I read Kerouac's ON THE ROAD many years ago. I enjoyed reading it. A very unique style of writing. I later did a lot of hitchhiking around the United States. I was on the road for most of 23 years (1996-2020). I had three books self-published. Met some great people in my travels. I remember reading in ON THE ROAD, Kerouac said that the most beautiful girls were in Des Moines, Iowa.
Kerouac was like a train wreck you can't look away from. A fascinating person you don't want to be. Burroughs was even more so, he had a lot more depth but he was definitely not someone you want to be. The whole beat movement was counter-inspiring. It showed how sad and pointless life could be. To not be like Kerouac or Burroughs was a positive goal.
For me, On The Road brought into sharp relief the vast difference between what being human was and what we were being told it was. Leave It To Beaver it was not. Thank you for bringing around the human that was Jack.
My sister's friend who knew Kerouac described Kerouac as "arrogant". In a strange antidote, my mother met friends of Kerouac's mother who reported that his mother would chase Ginsberg out of their house because he was a bad influence. It was a question to me about who was taking care of whom. The problem with alcohol at that time was that heavy drinking was considered okay or normal. Addiction treatment were then as now, not all that good particularly if the individual isn't inclined to stop him or herself. Whereas we have a lot of anti-anxiety and anti-psychotic drugs now, alcohol was a way to deal with emotional pain, although Vincent Fox, the addiction therapist, would disagree. Great video.
Thank you professor. I read OTR in 1980, just before spending a year traveling around the states. I rarely read non fiction just because there are so many books to read and only so much time. As an engineer I do miss the other side of life….
I hitch hiked from Boston to Canada in the eighties - I met some fantastic people and it seems a shame that the world is too dangerous for anyone to do it now.
I disregarded him for years. Then, thankfully, I got pulled in. He was a great writer. Thank you Jack for what you gave the world. It is precious. Fascinating video. Lots of things I didn’t know about him. Surprised about the sex stuff. He strikes me as shy and awkward with women in particular. Also, not a big fan of Cassidy. I read Joan Cassidy’s book. She was close to Jack, and they even had an awkward affair, encouraged by Neal, who definitely WAS a sex fiend. Cassidy was terrible to Joan, leaving her for long periods of time to do his own thing. He was an absolute speed freak (or else completely manic all the time, or both), and used people constantly. This comes up a lot in Jack’s books. Some of your closing thoughts remind me much more of Cassidy than Kerouac. I would DEFINITELY say that Cassidy was a narcissist. Jack, on the other hand, strikes me as someone with a very tender heart, who struggled to really connect with people. Writing autobiographical novels isn’t “incredibly selfish “ either. They were what he wrote, and the are all, to varying degrees, gifts of a great writer.
I really enjoyed listening to your poignant portrayal of Jack Kerouac's life & restless spirit. I see in his story the ultimately self-destructive consequence of not resolving inner conflicts. I have always heard of him, but have never read his books & maybe because I could feel the depression in his core & was struggling with my own inner conflicts & seeking ways to heal & break-free of heavy trauma conditioning. I feel sad for him. I appreciate you making this tribute reflection of his life, is fair & honest portrayal ❤
Sad. Growing up in an alcoholic family & becoming alcoholic himself. Alcoholics & those from alcoholic families can have a hard time feeling a part of the world, many times tend to isolate & struggle with authority…depression, etc. Had he gotten help, he might have had a happier life & not left a trail of unhappy relationships.
Professor Yorston, your take on Kerouac is a bit different than mine but I thoroughly enjoyed your work! It looks like he enjoyed his success for at least part of the time, and that, I suppose, is what I can hope for, for any of these writers.
Prof you have ended some of literary ignorance as I have never read Kerouac much to my shame, though I admit I am not a lover of the stream of consciousness style, yet you have encouraged me to try! Thank you for yet another superbly enjoyable and informative tutorials!
His tender humanity showed through in his writings despite his troubles and his writing inspired many artists beyond count...i think this portrait is too harsh however clinically accurate...
Jack was a celebrity because he was honest and a teacher and not because he was arrogant and outlandish. That is where his virtue lied. He created a way to live and showed you you are not alone. He is my inspiration for writing because he gave me something when I needed and wanted it the most. You can stand out and fit in regardless of looks. The clue is -- health.
Oooooh, this was excellent, well done. 👌🏾 Poor old alcoholic Jack. I’ll always remember his friend describing Kerouac, drunk out of his mind, in his living room grasping at his mother & insisting “you’re the only woman I’ve ever wanted to marry! I only wanna marry you!” And his mother trying to make light of it - “ oh now stop that, your friends will think you’re strange!”
Never enthralled with anything more than myself - the short messy life of understanding nothing but experiencing everything is looking for nothing and missing love at every stop.
Very interesting as always. I find his life very similar to my generational way of living (in Mexico, in the 60's). In the late 80's I lived in Monterrey 122, the building where Burroughs killed his wife. I prefer Kerouac's poetry by far. Thank you (again) for your meticulous work and insight on these literary icons.
I drank a few beers in the bars that JK frequented in Northport and I used to drive past his house there and in Lowell, Ma. to pay homage to the great writer with the unhappy ending. My favorite book of his the Dharma Bums. I never viewed him as a hero but as a trailblazer running from the conformity of gray business suit corporation men. Thanks, Jack. And, thank you Professor for a sober look at a fatally unsober man who tilted the world ever so slightly in a more free-spirited direction.
@edgarsnake2857 Is one of your messages that Kerouac was very handsome? You hinted at the connection between a man’s choice of clothing and his drinking habits. Many women enjoy flirting with well-dressed men who enjoy a drink or two. Possibly, Joan Haverty Kerouac did.
I have never read Kerouac and knew next to nothing about him, so this was informative. Of interest to me was, my father, also born in 1922, did his Navy basic training the same year and also in Rhode Island, so it’s possible they may have crossed paths. Thanks as always professor!
Fascinating lecture. My father was a radio operator ,merchant marine in WW2 . I became a merchant marine engineer and then put myself through flight school and became a professional pilot. Mr.Kerouac certainly wasn’t made to work under authority. I didn’t always like it, but it’s necessary. I’m going to have to read “On the Road” on my next camping trip.
There's something to be said about genetics and the nature verses nurture duo that help to shape an individual. I can definitely see both in him, just from this brief documentary, and I think you got it right. Jack Kerouac is a distant ancestor of mine, and that side of the family tree is full of individuals who were/are outliers in society. Ironically, I work as a nurse in mental health and addictions, and all the behaviour makes sense to me. I recently discovered the distant ties that bind us, and I'm looking forward to reading his work.
I had planned an On the Road adventure from my job in Hawaii. Travelling to LA and was loaned a small station wagon and had 30 days to drive up to British Columbia. A friend handed me a small book titled, Dharma Bums. I knew about it but had only read "On the Road " and some of Kesey's novels. I decided since it was a short book, I could only read 3 pages a day in order to finish it at the end of my drive. Well, I parked on the slopes of MT Baker , Washington had my alcohol in hand and realized, that the books story ends on MT Baker!!!
Thanks for this excellent remembrance, Dr. Y. I too was under his spell from adolescence on and met and drank with him at Gunther's Bar in Northport where we both lived in the early and mid-sixties. When he would fly from NY to St Petersburg, FL he'd wear a tag around his neck with his name and address so that if he fell out someone would deliver him to Stella or memère. As vocal aide-mémoires, the Steve Allen album and the Zen Haikus with Zoot Sims are both great, as is his spontaneous narration of Robert Frank's short film "Pull My Daisy." Dr. L.
Jack Kerouac’s cousin, also named Kerouac, was a crew member aboard my submarine the USS John Marshall, who was discharged just prior to my joining the crew. So apparently his cousin was more tolerant of the navy than he was. But Kerouac did eventually become a purser officer in the merchant marine probably because he knew how to type so well.
Read on the road in the 90s at 17...loved it as it really opened the door to the potential adventures awaiting in the wider/wilder world outside my small home town. I have never read it since as I still recall the wonderful impact it had on me and wouldn't want to lose that. Tried reading some of his other work, but it was far too heavy for me at the time.
@@professorgraemeyorston "the scroll" as it is called, is often exhibited in various museums and institutions when it's not being kept in storage. It is exhibited on a modular/rolling mechanism that allows it to be rolled out to different sections over the course of an exhibit. I had the honor of mounting the scroll and many other kerouac ephemera in an exhibition in the mid 2000s. Some of his original journals he kept while traveling (simple spiral-bound notebooks) that ended up becoming the content of On The Road, are held in the archives of the Harry Ransom Center at the University of Texas.
I liked your documentary very much, maybe the best that I saw! I am a Kerouac fan since my teens years and discovered later after reading a biography that I share the same birth date of 12 march mine is 1971. I am also a quebecois from Montreal. I've done a conference about Kerouac and the beats writers in collegial years for the philosophy class. Thank you very much, Mr. Yorston for your fine work and good continuation! 😊
Thank you so much for posting this. I have been studying the beats for years and I never really got a full picture of Jack Kerouac until I saw your video. I would love it if you would consider profiling Burroughs or some of the other Beats.❤
Excellent video. In 1979, when I was 19, I flew on Laker Airways from UK to New York and hitchhiked across the USA as far as Seattle and down into Mexico. That's how much Kerouac influenced my life. I still cherish the memories of that trip.
Sounds great, I did the same in 83, but went North to Canada for some reason. It's sad that no-one hitchhikes any more, it was a great way of meeting people.
@@professorgraemeyorston I Hitch From Time to time When I have to , People who have Hitched will Pick you up & That is who picks up Hitchhikers.
I hitched up & back California in my teens 1970s
til 84, haven't hitched since, definitely learned things about myself, like when I was picked up by pervo creeps I kept my calm, detached, while I plotted my move to get away, if they made a weird move I was going to rob them, take their car, a feeling like a stone door would close over my heart while I coldly appraised a situation, if they hadn't backed off I'm certain they would have ended up tied up in the trunk of their car, I didn't know I had that coldness in me, maybe it was reaction to soul-less predators, but they must have sensed my survival instincts cuz they backed off..
@@words4dyslexicon I hitched to court yesterday !
I did it in 95 but in a 1988 Chrysler New Yorker with a friend, no money and a trunk stuffed full of nothing but hundreds of CDs and books. Somehow we made it from Pittsburgh to LA and back. Took us 5 weeks. Although I have done some great hitch hiking around Northern California and beyond. I consider that road trip my Kerouac trip.
I loved Kerouac in high school, then stopped reading him. In my mid 30s, I picked up "On the Road" in a bookshop and started reading random passages and realized quickly how much the book shaped my consciousness. Thanks for the video. I loved it.
Same here. I realised how lucky I was to have read it as a teenager.🇸🇪🇮🇹✌️
@@11235butAnd does an orchestra play upon each written word as well! Lol!
@mateoneedham, I guess I missed my window for appreciating him. J. D. Salinger perhaps occupied that small space.
@@edcottingham1 Man, did I ever resonate with Holden Caulfield in high school...and today. Holden called people phonies. Today, I see it as falsehood and quite different from ignorance where intention becomes the benchmark. In so many ways, 2024 is much more difficult to navigate.
I also read him in college, and then again in my 40's and so much more appreciated his descriptive passages.
I found On the Road and Easy Rider very inspirational as a young man. I bought motorcycles and traveled back and fourth between the coast of the U. S. I still love the look of this country. Thanks for the nice summation of Kerouac. I've read a few of the books and enjoyed them all, during my college years I took a class on Beat Literature, which was lots of fun. Thanks again for posting!
Kerouac changed my life and has led me to great joy and great sorrow but I have always been ALIVE. Thanks, Jack, for the kick in the face. I love you.
It was never going to be easy with Jack!
Life long Kerouac reader your detailed research and narrative analysis of Kerouac's life and work in such a short space was exemplary and superb. Thank you.
I live in Saint Petersburg, Florida, where Jack spent the last few years of his life. He has become quite an icon here in the city. The flamingo bar on mlk, where he used to hang out regularly, has become quite a shrine to him, and they have events throughout the year in celebration of him. Recently, his last remaining house that he owned while living here was made into a historical landmark, and I'm proud to say that I was one of the local voices that led to it being made into that.
I've never read Kerouac, but have known his background story, especially around Neal Casady..I had no idea he had spent time in St Petersburg, where I visit my sister every year..I will look up The Flamingo..Do you know where the Cactus bar was?..
You would probably enjoy his work. It's a delight to read!
I'm from Northport, NY and drink at Gunther's Tap room where Jack was a regular for some years
Have you ever heard the stories the Jack's ghost lives on in Haslem's book store? It's said that from time to time the workers in the book store will come in to work and all of Jack's books will have been rearranged on the shelves.
what did McLuhan say: "every society admires its dead troublemakers and live conformists"?
With 1.4 thousand comments here i doubt mine will ever be read but I am moved to express my two cents nonetheless. I possess and have read a number of Kerouac bios, same with most all of his books including posthumous releases of his writings. Jack's writings have been and continue to be a source of pleasure, amazement, intrigue, inspiration, creativity, provocation of my senses, wonder, appreciation , hunger for raw experience, desire to explore the back alleys the underbelly of society, a craving to uncover the surface of people places things---
I was a Verb seeking the meaning inside all nouns...
And in my earlier life I did just that, same as so many of you did. The music of the '60's & '70's was to me what jazz bebop was to Jack I also delved into the jazz of his time and the artists he named in his books and dug it intensely as i still do.
The influence of jazz on his writing style and purpose and efforts he writes about often and plainly states in the beginning of Mexico City Blues.
I have read widely and deeply in poetry and literature and appreciate many writers and have a deep fondness and even love for many as I recognize the gifts they possessed -- including the ones driven by their mania or their melancholy, their fears their terrors, their angst cravings, their visions and voices, their hunger for grace their courting of darkness and death, their turning the stuff off life in nature and the nature of being human the stuff of storms in the sky and storms in their heads and hearts and turning all this into ART, poetry, literature, painting, sculpture, and innumerable other ways of creating.
The word poetry in Greek means "To Make".
As a poet myself, Kerouac remains a constant and a touchstone from my very early years, always bringing me a secret smile of appreciation for the force he released into the world through his one-of-a-kind expressions of jazz-like brilliance inscribed on the page his words like musical notes spontaneously creating unspeakable visions Blake-like and Bird-like compositions in his poems his sketches and his many books compiled together as the Legend of Duluoz.
Farewell and feel the spirit!
Probably the best documentary of Jack Kerouac ever been made! It was very pleasurable to listen to and watch! I have the most stimulating 30 minutes for a long time. Thanks very much!
Wow, thank you!
✅ Excellent.
-----------------------
I once went to a Film Fest, but (2) very genuine
people were there - with INSIGHT into
the French aspects of Kerouac.
(+) They had the DOCUMENTATION,
to back-it-up.
-------------
Nonetheless, this gentleman's work is excellent.
✔️ DETROIT
✔️ the WIVES; and exactly HOW...they figured
in his (narcissistic) Life.
America and ALCOHOLISM.
💣the Military and The WAR, Labeled it
SHELL SHOCK ( treatment).
Making it ACCEPTABLE.
---------
The Professor analysis WAS CORRECT.
I have been in White Trash, Republican, SOCAL
for (8) years.
Knew-of (10) alcoholics.
☠️☠️☠️☠️☠️☠️☠️☠️ (8) are DEAD.
#9...was 'dragged' to expensive DETOX.
At Age (70).
Two Years LATER..., that weak PIG, returned to Alcohol;
...and probably Meth,
🗣️
"...Pearls before SWINE.."
😩.... Whining, begging...CRYING...(pathetic)
🗣️"...I don't want to...DIE..". 🟨 DRAMA....COWARD..."
....Wastes...everybody's...TIME.
.... another LIEING, Manipulative....
A L C O H O L I C.
➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖➖
On the Road. The most influential book of my youth. It completely drove my 20s and early 30s. Train hoppin, hitchhiking, drinking, falling in and out of love. Ups and downs it was all a blast. Another beat.
Sounds like a well spent youth!
Im Brazilian … Kerouac is my heroes too ! When I read on the road change my life I was 22. Now I’m 58 and still thinking about Cassidy ! Jack was libertarian for me leaving in agriculture in south Brazil… now I’m live in London.. but I’m still have the vision I got from him ! Thanks I love you video !
Im 32 and bored with society. I love reading comments like yours that show other Jack fans were inspired to create their own adventures. I fantasize about living in my car and traveling acrosss the US
He did change the reading habits of a generation and opened the door to literature for a lot of people
I agree, literature became more real, more relevant for many people with the beat generation writers.
I am one I was there in the early sixties and wrote poetry and short quirky stories. I have completed two books. One is on the internet and been complimented.@@professorgraemeyorston
... 🙋🏻♂️ triggered a million road trips into western USA I lived in Denver for a time go to My Brother's Bar great cheeseburgers and sandwiches and an unpaid signed tab from Jack Kerouac and Neil Cassidy posted by the bathrooms one of my favorite Denver haunts 😎👍🏽🏔️
Thank you once again, this is a clearer analysis of this famed character than any others I came across…plunging into this beatnik culture as a foreign student in the 60‘s when Kerouac was an idol, I was most astonished and baffled, thanks for further clearing up his personal story in your video.
Glad you enjoyed it.
Thanks Prof- I enjoyed watching that; I was an 18 y-o ‘student’ in Paris in 1961, and Kerouac and Ginsburg were very much part of our young lives - I still remember the cover of On the Road with Kerouac and Dean Cassidy; when I got back I had to write away to import Bob Dylan and Nina Simone records cos you couldn’t get them. Happy memories of a mis-spent but not wasted youth 🙃
You have good taste.
Dr.Yorston, my parents were neighbors of Jack in St.Pete.My dad was a Beatnik and great admirer. He would mow Jack's lawn and then they would sit in the yard drinking beer. When I was 2 ( a few years after his death) I wondered off and Stella found me and played with me in the front yard until my parents came looking for me.
Wow, thank you for that memory, I love hearing from people with a personal connection.
I served 4 years in the Army after college, then went into medical sales. I read "On the Road" and it resonated so strongly with me! My favorite book of all time.
I quit my sales job and moved to Charleston SC to go to Dental School. Jack Kerouacs book was the main reason to pick up roots completely in my life.
The Electric Koolaid Acid Test is also another favorite. I just loved that "genre"
I'm planning a video on Ken Kesey soon.
Truman Capote famously referred to On the Road as not being writing, but "typewriting". Yes, I believe Jack was a loner who didn't enjoy being alone. This may have been part of his struggle. His main flaw for me was not taking responsibility, especially for himself and his life choices. With this said, I love his writings. You seem to miss that most of his works were meant to be free form word jazz. He adored Bebop jazz and musicians such as Dizzy Gillespie and Charlie Parker, and I think he tried to emulate them with his use of words. You do mention his readings with Steve Allen, this is what he was all about. Close your eyes and listen to "The moon her majesty". Simply beautiful. Free flowing.
That’s a great insight:”a loner who didn’t enjoy being alone.”Thank you for your input and thoughts.
I tried reading Big Sur and I just couldn't finish it. I liked the beginning, but for me it became too incoherent towards the middle of the book. Addiction runs in my family and it began to remind me of family members who would start off okay in conversation, but then go on and on about nothing.
That truman capote quote is sour grapes. I've read almost every Kerouac book he's put out but I haven't read anything of Capote. I'm not saying he's a bad writer (see how easy that is, capote?) but I haven't yet found a reason to concern myself with his books
@@sunkintree I'm actually going to start reading some Capote, after seeing him on an old David Letterman show I saw recently from 1982. Did you know Capote was the person that Harper Lee based the character "Dill" on in her book "To Kill A Mockingbird?" They were childhood friends. All of these writers did outstanding important work.
@@tonysienzant6717Did not know that character was based on Capote. I do know Droopy the cartoon dog was.
when i need waking from the mundanity of daily life, i too traverse the roadways. i thank the man for his unvanquishable thirst for what lay beyond.
Great overview of Jack, his 'lives' & characters. I read On the Road back in the late 60s during my high-school years & having listened to your dissection, there are quite a few similarities which I share with Jack. I too have tasted from the many aspects of life & for over 40 years, preferred the company of my cats, music, art & various writings, poems, observations & stor8es, than the busy gathering spots, which so many are attracted to. No chemical dependency has ever chained me down, even though I enjoyed flirting with a number of them. In today's world, the often vacuous friendships which abound, hold no interest for me, so life has prepared me well in coping with excluding those who add nothing of true value to my learning on this 'Road of Life'. I wish you you all a safe & interesting journey on your's. Just don't waste precious time on worthless endeavours. Check everything out, but abandon that which drains you. 😊❤
Get sober 😅❤❤❤
This is a great summation of Kerouac’s personality and life, a commendable job by the Professor. Personally I have come to see Kerouac as a truly tragic figure on the Greek scale. You have touched on his impulsiveness in quitting the Columbia football team which seems like a narcissistic injury. Then there is the promiscuity and ease in how he used people such as his first wife who bailed him out of jail in NYC. I have been under his spell and read most of his books more than once, done even thrice. I have read multiple biographies of him by his contemporaries and by scholars. I’ve also known some of the same people he knew. I’ve read the other beats and gone to hear them read. My conclusion is that Kerouac’s life and works describe the loss of innocence for the boomer generation. Growing up in the 1960’s was not easy. But of course it was his rebellion that inspired. Kerouac tried to show a way of living in reckless abandon of normal values and higher enlightenment. In the end I feel that the scourge of addiction, sociopathy and mindlessness in his hero worship of the antisocial Neal Cassady has wrought a huge scar on my generation. It was the scar of living and loving without a conscience. I don’t blame him though, Kerouac remains a hero to me at least a prosaic one.
Very interesting, thank you.
Thank you for this vid bio on Jack Kerouac.
Aside from everything else i'm still baffled by the shear readability of his work. It just seems to read itself and wash over you, much like the bebop he loved so much.
Yes, he was soooooo beat.
That was what was so different. I always struggled with Joyce, but Kerouac just flowed.
Very interesting take on Jack's writing style . I read 'On the Road' in a short time , and I found that it did indeed carry you along . The climax of the book in a Mexican whorehouse seemed fitting .
Thank you, professor Graeme, for the in-depth review of Kerouac’s body of work and his life. Your video shows how much effort and creativity you’ve put into making it. I greatly enjoyed this piece!
Many thanks!
Brava!
Another great video!
Thank you Professor!
Love & Light from Miami Shores🦚
Stay safe mate✌🏼🌎
This is excellent. Most of the beat videos on youtube are mashups of existing footages and stories, repetitive and more clickbait for the author's than trying to contribute anything new to the beat and Kerouac understanding. However, this offers a big trove of content you probably haven't seen before, both in the narrative and also in the visuals. This is excellent.
Thank you.
Kerouac found me, I didnt find him, as said by many who have been swept up by his genius. Ken Kesey once described the Grateful Dead in a way that I would describe Kerouac. Dead fans are willing to sit through a lot of mediocre or even bad music until you get to that one moment, where it pops and everything makes sense and you feel nothing but pure joy. This was Kerouac. If you could handle his meandering you would eventually get to a point of pure astonishment at the combination of narrative and poetry. He was an icon for sure, larger than life and unable to handle his fame. I like the way you point this out and I think this happens to some famous people, which is understandable. There is a lot of pressure to live up to the stature of defining a generation. Bob Dylan struggled with similar things. He didn't want to be the leader of a movement, he really just wanted to be an artist with some really poignant things to say. I think Kerouac felt the same, but he was exalted. I liked your portrayal. I appreciated the academic quality of it but I am sure you can understand that there is side to this man that is hard to capture in documentary form. You have to feel it to truly understand it. I dont think his work helped me become who I am, but it definitely helped shape the final product. I still read him today as I have yet to find any author who delights me like Kerouac. Thank you
Absolutely, I think it is impossible to convey the power of great art by talking about it, you have to experience it, whether it be writing or visual art.
I don't get your comparison to Kesey's comment on Grateful Dead shows. I've read many, if not all, of Kerouac 's books, and all the ones I've read are excellent.
This is quite an excellent presentation. I was a Kerouac freak in my college years in the mid-1980s and read everything that had been published about him at that time. Most of it was still fairly hagiographic. More decades have allowed us all to look at Kerouac more objectively. As a Psychology teacher, I particularly appreciated the updated speculations on Kerouac’s psychological profile, which make a lot of sense and also help explain Kerouac’s greatness as well as his limitations as a literary figure.
Thank you, Professor Yorston, your presentation explained a great deal. After reading "On the Road," I felt disappointed. It left me feeling unhinged. I can't remember the exact year, but it was definitely after university when I read the novel. In addition to the regular curriculum of the Catholic high school I attended, I read Sartre, Camus, Selby and Salinger before I graduated. Much to the chagrin of the religious instructors, who threatened to confiscate these books in study hall. None of those authors ever affected me negatively the way Kerouac did. I understood the stream of consciousness device. But Kerouac made me feel uneasy. As a result, I never had any desire to seek out his other works.
Chuck in Northern New England
I think his life was "uneasy". This is very clear in Dharma Bums. Perhaps you tuned in to him more than a casual reader?
Oh Mr. Jack kerouac. I drove around the west for the most part thinking about his prophetic life and efforts that were great in my opinion. In the 1990s when I wrote a song about him, I didn't know Neal did all the driving? He was still a brilliant star to me. I've read several books about him too. Thanks.
Glad you enjoyed it.
Thanks Graeme for another intriguing and insightful review... The beat was another cog in our offbeat addiction to music and literature, and film in the 60's and 70's...We were blessed to have so much to immerse ourselves.
They were great times!
Thanks Professor! I really don't enjoy Kerouac (his selfishness overwhelms me) but I appreciate your talent for making these biographies so I can learn about why he was the way he was.
Thank you, I can remember being disappointed when I first read On the Road, because of the selfishness, but it grew on me.
@@professorgraemeyorstonSeems to me that Cassidy was the selfish one...example: leaving a very ill Kerouac in Mexico to fend for himself while Cassidy returned to the states to get some ( earthy description)
I fricken love Kerouac's writing. He was really special.
He was a great writer.
I read both "On the Road" and "Dharma Bums" while I myself was in the military. I understand why Jack thought, and was upset about, the Beat Movement being misunderstood. When you read a Kerouac book, and then look at Ginsberg, you can see two different trains going in two different directions. I tried the other stuff like "Naked Lunch", but it just didn't take in me. But, Kerouac's words, to this day, some thirty years later, still conjure up mental images in my head. I don't remember the words, but I remember his memories. In the end, I think Jack had a fatal case of existentialism and nihilism. Death was probably the only release.
I agree, I much prefer his writing to Ginsberg and Burroughs.
Well said. Jack wanted out. Brilliant, handsome, sexy man with so much to offer people. May he rest well.
An excellent documentary and analysis of his life. The segment on artists and substance abuse was especially enlightening
I’m here for professors and academics doing UA-cam docs.
Wow! You must be an exceptionally unique human being!
UA-cam University
Absolutely great. I knew a lot about Kerouac from reading him, and general interest. This was a masterly description and analysis of Jack. It was Truman Capote who said > >that's not writing it's typewriting < ... Well, I can still pick up " On the Road" and have a huge emotional attachment. I also felt kin to Jack Kerouac in that I was a moody and angry alcoholic drinker for most of my life > Now a moody and angry non-drinker,
Thanks, non-drinking drinkers are the ones who stay alive!
One of the more satisfying pieces of content I have watched in recent times. Sadly many contributers on the internet these days are more interested in themselves as presenters rather than in their subject matter. But here the subject matter - Jack Kerouac - is front and centre. Beautifully put together, rich with information in language that does not try unnecessarily to draw attention to itself, this video is interesting from beginning to end. Thank you very much Professor. I have subscribed.
Thank you, welcome aboard!
I have been reading Kerouac and books about him for the past 54 years. I am really impressed by this video because it encapsulated so many of Kerouac's highlights from his complex life. Well done indeed professor! Steve Mehl retired clinical psychologist
Thanks Steve.
Kerouac is one of my favorite authors. On The Road introduced me to a style writing that was new to me. Jack was a complex individual but a very real one. I have read about a half dozen of his books of which 'Dharma Bums' is my favorite. What I loved about Jack is that he actually LIVED those experiences, not intellectualized or dreamed about. Kerouac was complex, but an icon.
He was a complex personality, but the adoption of him as an icon says more about society than it does him and I think this added to his discomfort.
Thank you for this! I read on the road as a young man many years ago and took off hitchhiking as soon as I finished it! The road took to where I am now ...many decades later, and I re-read on the road a few years ago and was surprised and ashamed to realize how PG the novel seemed! The inspiration it first gave me was so hard to find again....but non the less, I'm grateful for reading books, traveling , and God damn I REALLY miss high jinx
Yeah...those high jinx!
I really enjoyed the psychoanalysis of his literature and life. I also concluded that he was somewhat in the spectrum of narcissistic tendencies and felt he was driven by his shaping experiences of shame, negative core beliefs or not being lovable He compensated by grandiose delusions that never satisfied his wanderlust. He’s also highly relatable to people who just want to be accepted but can’t accept themselves, a human condition.
Thank you.
Kerouac defined the beat generation, and taught many outcasts and discontents, including myself, how to live in a world that doesn’t give a damn about us. I love that man.
He helped give a voice to those whom society had forgotten.
@@professorgraemeyorston Nah, Bukowski did that.
@@Damien8888not saying I agree that he did, but if he did, that doesn't mean Kerouac didn't. Jack also beat him to it, since on the road came out 2 years before anything Bukowski published. I think that if Bukowski gave a voice to any forgotten, it was a different forgotten.
@@matthewatwood8641 “Like anybody can tell you, I am not a very nice man. I don't know the word. I have always admired the villain, the outlaw, the son of a bitch. I don't like the clean-shaven boy with the necktie and the good job. I like desperate men, men with broken teeth and broken minds and broken ways. They interest me. They are full of surprises and explosions. I also like vile women, drunk cursing bitches with loose stockings and sloppy mascara faces. I'm more interested in perverts than saints. I can relax with bums because I am a bum. I don't like laws, morals, religions, rules. I don't like to be shaped by society.”
― Charles Bukowski, South of No North
Doctor I am grateful that you took the time and effort to put this video out.
Glad you enjoyed it.
Great presentation of a complicated man. He has fascinated me since I can remember, especially his friendship with Cassady, whose connection to Jerry Garcia is legendary. Neal was everything Jack wasn't able to be, as is often the case. I often wonder how different Jack and his writing would have been, had they never met. Such abstract and influential cats. They will never stop fascinating me. Thanks for a stirring video to bring it all back.
Interesting question - Kerouac and the Beats without Cassady? A lot more depressing I suspect.
@@professorgraemeyorston Polar opposites whose lives had so much in common, quite the paradox.
"The bus came by and I got on, that's when it all began. There was cowboy Neal at the wheel on a bus to Nevereverland"
@@seanegan3296 But the heat came 'round and busted me for smiling on a cloudy day.....
About the best 30 minutes I've spent on UA-cam in a long while. Very well done. Thanks for that.
Glad you enjoyed it!
whaaaaaaaaaaaaat are u talking about??? don't forget to vote for bernie sanders.. lolol - good god!
On the road helped me feel like I had someone to relate the most obscure feelings and thoughts to
That was certainly the motivation of the early works by the beat writers.
I was going through an Air Force technical school in Denver when I read this book. I was 18 and it inspired me to seek out adventures on Larimar Street when it was still the rundown area, not some yuppie hangout. I left there in June, 1965 on a Greyhound bus heading to St Louis. When I got on the bus, I found a seat next to a young Mexican woman who was leaving her husband. We talked all the way to St Louis and to this day I regret letting her continue to Ohio. It was a Keroauc experience. I later would hitchhike thousands of miles looking for adventure.
Sounds like you were on the road.
I live next to the piano bar in Denver he used to hang out. I can picture him there today. Charlie Browns
You were probably at Lowry AFB in Denver (?) In those days, airmen would congregate at the downtown corner of Broadway and Colfax . . . and people would give them lifts back to the base in east Denver. A way of life that is long gone now . . .
So nice of you to “let” that woman live her life & make her own choices as an individual in this life, as opposed to treating her as an object of conquest, as Kerouac saw many people in this life.
Excuse me…. Sorry for the intrusion anyone know where might find anyth😊 on mechanical engineering?
Excellent video! I never read anything of Kerouac, but was always curious.
Your style of narrating, is composed, without drama and you let the story speak for itself. I hope to catch more of your videos. Thank you!
Glad you enjoyed it! Welcome aboard.
Thank you for this wonderfully detailed summary with some facts I didn't know, and trust me, I thought I knew them all about Jack! Love his work!
Thank you, I always like to hear that I have offered something new to people who have a good knowledge of a subject.
Thank you for a really good mini biog of Kerouac, I have been a fan of his since the mid 60’s when I first discovered him, ‘On The Road’ changed my life, it completely redirected me, I hitch-hiked across Europe and Asia soon after (you are so right, what a pity people no longer travel this way), in the 80’s I drove NY to LA via Denver tracing some of his travelling and I have friends who had met him and I have also discussed Neal with some of those who knew him. Some of the experiences and relationships I have had with American women have reflected much of that culture, not always in a comfortable way, now 60 years later, I regret none of it. However I will admit that the more I learned about him the more I realized he was a deeply flawed man but still an incredibly influential one, in many ways the man of the time.
Again, for 30 minutes to cover his life so well quite amazing and faultless. I think Big Sur was somehow his best work. But please keep your channel going, it can only go from strength to strength. Thank you .
Thank you, I hope so.
He was a big hit with me in high school and college. Became a freind with mike perkins who lived with alan watts on a house boat in sausalito...great days. days
Big Sur is a dank, oppressive nightmare of a book but the journey is worthwhile. It has more to teach than On The Road. Good choice for best work I say
Great video. I ran into the Dharma Bums by a hippie English Teacher right after High School. I can say assuredly that my life path immediately changed. I only read the Dharma Bums, but the Beatniks got a hold of me for a short while.
History has a way of sort of putting cultural icons into perspective, seeing value where it exists but also the dead end of trying to self medicate and the “it’s better to burn out than fade away” ethic.
I agree you need the perspective of time to truly evaluate someone.
I cannot believe that I was just speaking about him with a friend.....we both went away to "look up" some information...and here...the good Professor gives us this!
Glad to be of service!
The phones are spying on ya.
I bought a copy of one of his books in New York - I cam home and there was a piece on that very same book offered to me by YT...@@bohotumbleweed8319
You clearly don’t know how you are being surveilled then.
Yep phone heard that
On the Road changed many generations. I read it and it spoke to me. I'm also from the east of usa and the west was calling to me so I went. I can only imagine how many people were inspired to do the same. Dharma Bums is a good one too. But On the Road was the one for me. Thanks for the video. Well done.
It is hard to pin down what it was about his writing that was so different - I think maybe the writing and the lifestyle went hand in hand!
@@professorgraemeyorston true. Also was blurred reality and fiction. Life experiences mixed with dreams or other people's experiences. It grabbed me
Nice work professor. I have noted the influence of Thomas Wolfe in Kerouac's work. But Tom Wolfe was under the influence of Tuberculin Mycobacterium in the right side of his brain.
I also appreciate your mention of alcoholism in the French Canadian population. This is the saddest of conditions.
Thank you, I didn't realise he had tuberculous meningitis - as did Modigliani.
Drugs and alcohol don’t help- did not mention “Pull My Daisy” great film
That’s strange-l just watched the video and l don’t recall any mention of alcoholism in the French-Canadian community.
the professor doesn't say that about the French Canadians, but he does mention Jack Kerouac and his alcoholism. My father was
was Catholic French Canadian who died of alcoholism. I met Jan Kerouac at an AA meeting. the statistics are that the French are very prone to alcoholism,
whether it be in France or Quebec.
@@BarryHart-xo1oy
I read a lot about him & a few of his books. Thank you for your insights & kind observations.
Very enlightening info thank you for this! I had found snippets about his life that never made sense but what you’ve done here makes sense of not only the man himself but also explains how that writing style of his was birthed. Well done!
Glad you enjoyed it.
Just when I thought I’d watched all the Kerouac biographies, I find another one. This was very well done!
My father played High School football with Jack. He didn't think much of his skill. Maybe bc my father's coach always referred to (my father) as "that Greek boy." He didn't think much of his writings either, but I did. I really liked the book and have read it several times. I too took the wrong message that he claims many did. I did my share of sex, drugs, and rock 'n roll. Disagreed with the Vietnam War, but went in the Army anyway. My wayward friends and I really adored his sense of freedom. I was also a loner, but with friends. I read many beat writers. I'm 77 now and I miss those days, but I feel my generation, the Boomers, brought a certain negativity to this country. This was a great biography. I enjoyed it immensely. Thank you!!
Maybe because of the beat generation and the hippies after them the baby boomer generation was pushed away from traditional American values of faith , marriage and hard work that were the strength of the WW 2 generation . I shocked a lot of people when I joined the US Army as a hippie kid in 1974 , but Vietnam was over for us , and my upbringing and schooling was the last of the
patriotic type for the boomers . 10 years later , the kids were much different than I was .
Yah, where did the hippies and the beatniks go?
Society has changed in all countries, there was plenty that was wrong with the pre-war era that is now better, but a lot of the good stuff has also been lost along the way.
@@leadwithgreeneconomy
Nursing homes.
@@leadwithgreeneconomySome of just grew old still holding many of the values of our youth dear; others turned into their parents becoming co-opted into a culture they once despised.
Thank you Professor Yorston for this video labor of love. You brought Kerouac closer to my understanding.
Glad you enjoyed it.
You really are an exquisite storyteller. I’m so happy to have stumbled upon your channel. I appreciate that you treat each subject with the humanity and compassion that each of us deserves.
Thank you, I'm glad you're enjoying them.
Kerouac was one of America's greatest writers to date. Previously to watching this video I had never heard of Prof. Yorston. Likely, I never will again.
I'm not trying to compete with him.
I just began to read 'On The Road' again, and I also love 'Babydriver' an autobiography from his daughter Jan, who just like her father, had an amazing photographic memory..! That book is one big wild ride, and she wasn't only the daugher of Jack but also of her mother Joan, a lovely eccentric and extravert woman. Jan's personality is a lot like her mom's and she's got her lust for adventure and traveling probably from her dad (maybe also from his books) 'Babydriver' begins somewhere in South America where Jan (16 yrs.) lives with a guy in the jungle, she's 8,9 months pregnant, and from then on the book becomes this fantastic wild ride from her early youth in Harlem (NY) to all kinds of different places. She's got great personality and great intellect, lots of humour, and she didn't see using heroin as a low period but enjoyed the trip (I did too. There's enough people who function fine cause they don't use much & who are using for many years. They work a normal day job and no one knows cause they function fine) Jan Kerouac was an amazing woman and I wish Jack would have known her better. In that book she said that she only met him once (I believe when she was 8 yrs. old) and he looked astonished when he met her, cause she looked a lot like him while he always believed that she was from another guy.
She sounds great, but it is sad that they never really spent any time together.
My dad was Jack Kerouac, (real name Dennis Hotte) but lived the same life as Jack. He was born in 1924 and passed away Dec. 12, 2023, 2 months before his 100th birthday! My dad traveled the country at least 40 times. He was born in Holyoke MA, his mom and dad from Canada, and I was born in CA.1955, what a long, strange trip it's been!
What a story!
Wow amazing .. was this doco true for what you knew of him .?
@@fiwalker6690read the comment again, Jack did not die in 2023. He said his dad was Jack, but then said he lived the same life as Jack. So it's not his son, he never had a son
I work in holyoke
Thank you for yet another informative and comprehensive documentary. I used to love Kerouac when I was a teen. As Internet was not widely available during the early 90s, I was not aware of his bio and all the not-so-flattering details. As a result, watching your documentary about him gave me a bitter-sweet feeling. It's interesting how the less likable of us can leave such gems behind. Looking forward to your next upload! My suggestion, if not covered already, would be Charles Baudelaire. 😊
Thank you, yes Baudelaire was an interesting character.
Congratulations. You just realized that he was a human being. Flawed, like all of us.
I have always wanted to read On the Road, now i definitely will.
I really enjoyed your intelligent analysis and your sympathy for the alcoholic. Sadly, so many "writers" engage with the fantasy that intoxicants can liberate their creativity, when the opposite is usually the case.
For every Hemingway, there are a hundred poets whose creativity burnt out in an alcoholic haze.
Sadly, I think Hemingway also burnt down, if not completely out as a result of his drinking.
One of the all-time GREATS ...Thanks for uploading your video ⭐✨⭐✨⭐⭐⭐✨⭐
Thank you, I agree.
I read Kerouac's ON THE ROAD many years ago. I enjoyed reading it. A very unique style of writing. I later did a lot of hitchhiking around the United States. I was on the road for most of 23 years (1996-2020). I had three books self-published. Met some great people in my travels. I remember reading in ON THE ROAD, Kerouac said that the most beautiful girls were in Des Moines, Iowa.
When I was growing up 60-70 years ago Jack was in my peer group viewed as the leader of the counterculture beat generation. well done.👍
Glad you enjoyed it.
i loved the 10 seconds you spent talking about his 6 years living in northport
Great video and thanks for the reading list! Philip K. Dick would be a great artist to see in one of your future videos.
Great suggestion.
Kerouac was like a train wreck you can't look away from. A fascinating person you don't want to be. Burroughs was even more so, he had a lot more depth but he was definitely not someone you want to be. The whole beat movement was counter-inspiring. It showed how sad and pointless life could be. To not be like Kerouac or Burroughs was a positive goal.
Could not have said it better myself.
Spot on!
Add Chet Baker to the long list of super talented artists "I wouldn't want to be."
I suppose it requires someone who aspires to be a writer or artist to want to be Kerouac. Always interesting what the normies think.
@@sunkintree”Normies?” 🙄
For me, On The Road brought into sharp relief the vast difference between what being human was and what we were being told it was. Leave It To Beaver it was not. Thank you for bringing around the human that was Jack.
Thank you, I think his writing opened up a lot different possibilities and choices fer people.
My sister's friend who knew Kerouac described Kerouac as "arrogant". In a strange antidote, my mother met friends of Kerouac's mother who reported that his mother would chase Ginsberg out of their house because he was a bad influence. It was a question to me about who was taking care of whom. The problem with alcohol at that time was that heavy drinking was considered okay or normal. Addiction treatment were then as now, not all that good particularly if the individual isn't inclined to stop him or herself. Whereas we have a lot of anti-anxiety and anti-psychotic drugs now, alcohol was a way to deal with emotional pain, although Vincent Fox, the addiction therapist, would disagree. Great video.
Thank you professor. I read OTR in 1980, just before spending a year traveling around the states. I rarely read non fiction just because there are so many books to read and only so much time. As an engineer I do miss the other side of life….
I hitch hiked from Boston to Canada in the eighties - I met some fantastic people and it seems a shame that the world is too dangerous for anyone to do it now.
Excellent video, thank you! I am rediscovering Kerouac, reading Big Sur as an aging man is much different than it was reading it as a young man.
Thank you, age certainly changes your perspective on things.
I disregarded him for years. Then, thankfully, I got pulled in. He was a great writer. Thank you Jack for what you gave the world. It is precious.
Fascinating video. Lots of things I didn’t know about him.
Surprised about the sex stuff. He strikes me as shy and awkward with women in particular.
Also, not a big fan of Cassidy. I read Joan Cassidy’s book. She was close to Jack, and they even had an awkward affair, encouraged by Neal, who definitely WAS a sex fiend. Cassidy was terrible to Joan, leaving her for long periods of time to do his own thing. He was an absolute speed freak (or else completely manic all the time, or both), and used people constantly. This comes up a lot in Jack’s books. Some of your closing thoughts remind me much more of Cassidy than Kerouac. I would DEFINITELY say that Cassidy was a narcissist. Jack, on the other hand, strikes me as someone with a very tender heart, who struggled to really connect with people. Writing autobiographical novels isn’t “incredibly selfish “ either. They were what he wrote, and the are all, to varying degrees, gifts of a great writer.
Fair point about the novels, but I still think he comes across as selfish.
I really enjoyed listening to your poignant portrayal of Jack Kerouac's life & restless spirit. I see in his story the ultimately self-destructive consequence of not resolving inner conflicts. I have always heard of him, but have never read his books & maybe because I could feel the depression in his core & was struggling with my own inner conflicts & seeking ways to heal & break-free of heavy trauma conditioning. I feel sad for him. I appreciate you making this tribute reflection of his life, is fair & honest portrayal ❤
Sad.
Growing up in an alcoholic family & becoming alcoholic himself.
Alcoholics & those from alcoholic families can have a hard time feeling a part of the world, many times tend to isolate & struggle with authority…depression, etc.
Had he gotten help, he might have had a happier life & not left a trail of unhappy relationships.
Professor Yorston, your take on Kerouac is a bit different than mine but I thoroughly enjoyed your work! It looks like he enjoyed his success for at least part of the time, and that, I suppose, is what I can hope for, for any of these writers.
Merci ! Very interesting . I read On the Road at 19 hitchiking across Canada from Québec to Yukon . Dharma Bums followed .
Coup de coeur .
Have you read any of his work in French?
An original, like Hemingway.😎
Prof you have ended some of literary ignorance as I have never read Kerouac much to my shame, though I admit I am not a lover of the stream of consciousness style, yet you have encouraged me to try! Thank you for yet another superbly enjoyable and informative tutorials!
I would suggest starting with the Dharma Bums - it is more conventional than On the Road.
His tender humanity showed through in his writings despite his troubles and his writing inspired many artists beyond count...i think this portrait is too harsh however clinically accurate...
Jack was a celebrity because he was honest and a teacher and not because he was arrogant and outlandish. That is where his virtue lied. He created a way to live and showed you you are not alone. He is my inspiration for writing because he gave me something when I needed and wanted it the most. You can stand out and fit in regardless of looks. The clue is -- health.
Oooooh, this was excellent, well done. 👌🏾 Poor old alcoholic Jack. I’ll always remember his friend describing Kerouac, drunk out of his mind, in his living room grasping at his mother & insisting “you’re the only woman I’ve ever wanted to marry! I only wanna marry you!” And his mother trying to make light of it - “ oh now stop that, your friends will think you’re strange!”
Yes, it was a close bond!
Apart from a mother fixation wasn't he also known to be quite rascist ?
Never enthralled with anything more than myself - the short messy life of understanding nothing but experiencing everything is looking for nothing and missing love at every stop.
Very interesting as always. I find his life very similar to my generational way of living (in Mexico, in the 60's). In the late 80's I lived in Monterrey 122, the building where Burroughs killed his wife. I prefer Kerouac's poetry by far. Thank you (again) for your meticulous work and insight on these literary icons.
Thank you, I have always found Burroughs a bit of struggle.
I drank a few beers in the bars that JK frequented in Northport and I used to drive past his house there and in Lowell, Ma. to pay homage to the great writer with the unhappy ending. My favorite book of his the Dharma Bums. I never viewed him as a hero but as a trailblazer running from the conformity of gray business suit corporation men. Thanks, Jack.
And, thank you Professor for a sober look at a fatally unsober man who tilted the world ever so slightly in a more free-spirited direction.
@edgarsnake2857 Is one of your messages that Kerouac was very handsome? You hinted at the connection between a man’s choice of clothing and his drinking habits. Many women enjoy flirting with well-dressed men who enjoy a drink or two. Possibly, Joan Haverty Kerouac did.
I have never read Kerouac and knew next to nothing about him, so this was informative. Of interest to me was, my father, also born in 1922, did his Navy basic training the same year and also in Rhode Island, so it’s possible they may have crossed paths. Thanks as always professor!
It's a small world!
Maybe try reading his books?
Fascinating lecture. My father was a radio operator ,merchant marine in WW2 . I became a merchant marine engineer and then put myself through flight school and became a professional pilot. Mr.Kerouac certainly wasn’t made to work under authority. I didn’t always like it, but it’s necessary. I’m going to have to read “On the Road” on my next camping trip.
When counterculture and coolness came from a WRITER....... Imagine that in 2024.
Good point - I guess people still read then!
There's something to be said about genetics and the nature verses nurture duo that help to shape an individual. I can definitely see both in him, just from this brief documentary, and I think you got it right. Jack Kerouac is a distant ancestor of mine, and that side of the family tree is full of individuals who were/are outliers in society. Ironically, I work as a nurse in mental health and addictions, and all the behaviour makes sense to me. I recently discovered the distant ties that bind us, and I'm looking forward to reading his work.
Interesting, hope you enjoy the journey!
I had planned an On the Road adventure from my job in Hawaii. Travelling to LA and was loaned a small station wagon and had 30 days to drive up to British Columbia. A friend handed me a small book titled, Dharma Bums. I knew about it but had only read "On the Road " and some of Kesey's novels. I decided since it was a short book, I could only read 3 pages a day in order to finish it at the end of my drive. Well, I parked on the slopes of MT Baker , Washington had my alcohol in hand and realized, that the books story ends on MT Baker!!!
awesome!
Glacier is a beautiful tiny town
Thanks for this excellent remembrance, Dr. Y. I too was under his spell from adolescence on and met and drank with him at Gunther's Bar in Northport where we both lived in the early and mid-sixties. When he would fly from NY to St Petersburg, FL he'd wear a tag around his neck with his name and address so that if he fell out someone would deliver him to Stella or memère. As vocal aide-mémoires, the Steve Allen album and the Zen Haikus with Zoot Sims are both great, as is his spontaneous narration of Robert Frank's short film "Pull My Daisy." Dr. L.
Jack Kerouac’s cousin, also named Kerouac, was a crew member aboard my submarine the USS John Marshall, who was discharged just prior to my joining the crew. So apparently his cousin was more tolerant of the navy than he was. But Kerouac did eventually become a purser officer in the merchant marine probably because he knew how to type so well.
Read on the road in the 90s at 17...loved it as it really opened the door to the potential adventures awaiting in the wider/wilder world outside my small home town. I have never read it since as I still recall the wonderful impact it had on me and wouldn't want to lose that. Tried reading some of his other work, but it was far too heavy for me at the time.
I think you're right - it has to be read at right time in your life.
I love the legend that he wrote On the Road in one swooping romp on the back of a literal roll of wallpaper :)
The reality is probably a bit more complex, but it's a great story.
@@professorgraemeyorston "the scroll" as it is called, is often exhibited in various museums and institutions when it's not being kept in storage. It is exhibited on a modular/rolling mechanism that allows it to be rolled out to different sections over the course of an exhibit. I had the honor of mounting the scroll and many other kerouac ephemera in an exhibition in the mid 2000s. Some of his original journals he kept while traveling (simple spiral-bound notebooks) that ended up becoming the content of On The Road, are held in the archives of the Harry Ransom Center at the University of Texas.
I liked your documentary very much, maybe the best that I saw! I am a Kerouac fan since my teens years and discovered later after reading a biography that I share the same birth date of 12 march mine is 1971. I am also a quebecois from Montreal. I've done a conference about Kerouac and the beats writers in collegial years for the philosophy class. Thank you very much, Mr. Yorston for your fine work and good continuation! 😊
Thank you, high praise indeed!
An exceptional summary, thank you, Professor Yorkston. Have you thought of Peter Sellers, he was a genius of comedy, he lived a troubled life.
I would enjoy that.
Thank you, great suggestion, I'll add him to the list.
@@professorgraemeyorston, thank you.
I really enjoyed this video. Lovely quality! I'll be sure to watch many more...
Welcome aboard.
Thank you so much for posting this. I have been studying the beats for years and I never really got a full picture of Jack Kerouac until I saw your video. I would love it if you would consider profiling Burroughs or some of the other Beats.❤
Thank you, Burroughs is next on the list.