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      • Poetically experimental and politically dissident, the Beat poets expanded their consciousnesses through explorations of hallucinogenic drugs, sexual freedom, Eastern religion, and the natural world. They took inspiration from jazz musicians, surrealists, metaphysical poets, visionary poets such as William Blake, and haiku and Zen poetry.
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  2. 6 days ago · Beat movement, American social and literary movement originating in the 1950s and centred in the bohemian artist communities of San Franciscos North Beach, Los AngelesVenice West, and New York City’s Greenwich Village. Its adherents, self-styled as “beat” (originally meaning “weary,” but later also connoting a musical sense, a ...

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › BeatnikBeatnik - Wikipedia

    They influenced many aspects of art, literature, music, film, fashion, and language. They also inspired many social movements and subcultures that followed them, such as the hippies, the counterculture, the New Left, the civil rights movement, the feminist movement, the environmental movement, and the LGBT movement.

  4. As a cultural phenomenon, the Beat movement was short-lived. As a literary movement, it proved highly influential, with Kerouac writing a number of novels and Ginsberg establishing himself as a major American poet in the tradition of Walt Whitman (1819–1892).

  5. The Beat Generation was a literary subculture movement started by a group of authors whose work explored and influenced American culture and politics in the post-World War II era. The bulk of their work was published and popularized by Silent Generationers in the 1950s, better known as Beatniks.

  6. May 5, 2019 · The 1960 Republican Convention featured J. Edgar Hoover proclaiming that “Communists, Eggheads, and Beatniks” were the country’s great enemies. The years between 1957 and 1960 marked the “the acceptance of the beatnik dissent and the emergence of a fad: a cultural protest transformed into a commodity,” writes Petrus.

  7. The Beat movement was America's first major Cold War literary movement. Originally a small circle of unpublished friends, it later became one of the most significant sources of contemporary counterculture, and the most successful free speech movement in American literature.

  8. Poetically experimental and politically dissident, the Beat poets expanded their consciousnesses through explorations of hallucinogenic drugs, sexual freedom, Eastern religion, and the natural world. They took inspiration from jazz musicians, surrealists, metaphysical poets, visionary poets such as William Blake , and haiku and Zen poetry.

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