Ginsberg’s Howl’s Influence on the Emergence of Hip-hop music

Adjoining the Parallels of Two Counter-Cultures in the Twentieth Century America

  • Shaurya Pathania Student
Keywords: Howl, Ginsberg, Beat Generation, Hip-Hop music, Counter-culture

Abstract

Howl (1955) is regarded as one of the most influential and prophetic poems of Allen Ginsberg and the modern America. It’s a lamentation for the creative minds and a portrayal of oppressed American society which suppresses all the radical and rebellious artists. The establishment of this poem’s literary merit in the literary circle has always been under great scrutiny as it was charged for obscenity. Consequently, after a precarious journey and suffering criticism by several conservative literary critics and scholars, Ginsberg’s Howl sustained itself in America, and led to influence many radical writers and artists. 

In the similar manner, later in 1970s, emerged a performing art called rap music, which is generally engulfed under the terminology of hip-hop (deejaying, rapping, graffiti painting, break dancing). Hip-hop began as an expression of rebellion against established system in black communities but eventually got celebrated through the entire America.

This paper tries to situate Howl and Ginsberg as revolutionary, self-reflexive and an influence which paved the way for the birth of counter-cultures. A parallel between the two movements (Beat movement and Hip-hop) is searched and contemplated by pointing out the similarities in the ethos of both of these movements.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Author Biography

Shaurya Pathania, Student

Shaurya Pathania holds a Masters Degree in English Literature from University of Delhi, India. He has a keen interest in poetry. Some of his works have appeared, or are forthcoming in JAKE, A coup of owls press, Synchronized Chaos, Song of Eertz review, Indian Periodical, and elsewhere.

References

1. Abrams, M.H, and Geoffrey Galt Harpham. “Performance poetry”.A Glossary of Literary Terms. Eleventh Edition. Cengage Learning, 2015 pp. 271-272.
2. Epstein, Rob and Jeffrey Friedman, director. Howl. Screenplay by Rob Epstein and Jeffrey Friedman, Telling Pictures, 2010 YouTube, uploaded by Peli Sub Esp, 10 December 2013, www://youtu.be/WhVnnSnaRNM Accessed 27 December 2022.
3. Ginsberg, Allen. Howl and Other Poems. 1956, City Light Books, 2001.
4. Herbeniak, Michael. “Jazz and the Beat Generation.” A Companion to Twentieth Century Poetry, edited by Neil Roberts, Blackwell Publishers, 2001, pp.250-264.
5. Jenkins, Candice M.““Reading" Hip-Hop Discourse in the Twenty-First Century.” African American Review, Vol. 46, No. 1, Special issue: Hip Hop and the Literary, 2013, pp. 1-8, JSTOR. www.jstor.org/stable/23783597 . Accessed 2 January 2023.
6. Lawlor, William. “Were Jack Kerouac, Allen Ginsberg, and William S. Burroughs a Generation?” The Cambridge Companion to the Beats, edited by Steven Beletto, Cambridge Unity Press, 2017, pp. 23-35.
7. Leach, Andrew. ““One Day it’ll All Make Sense": Hip-Hop and Rap Resources for Music Librarians.” Notes, Second Series, Vol. 65, No. 1, Sep., 2008, pp. 9-37. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/30163606 . Accessed 24 December 2022.
8. Morgan, Bill. The Typewriter is holy: The Complete, Uncensored History of the Beat Generation. Free Press. 2010.
9. Mortenson, Erik. “Allen Ginsberg and Beat Poetry”. The Cambridge Companion to the Beats, edited by Steven Beletto, Cambridge Unity Press, 2017, pp. 77-92.
10. Osborne, John. “The Beats: A Problematic Canon”. A Companion to Twentieth Century Poetry, edited by Neil Roberts, Blackwell Publishers, 2001, pp.183-196.
11. Questlove, and Method Man. “The Early Years of Hip-Hop –Drunk History.” YouTube uploaded by Comedy Central, 29 July 2020. www://youtu.be/ZnMqFrxxQNg
12. Raskin, Jonah. “Beatniks, Hippies, Yippies, Feminists, and the Ongoing American Counterculture.” The Cambridge Companion to the Beats, edited by Steven Beletto, Cambridge Unity Press, 2017, pp. 36-51.
13. Simpson, Louis. Studies of Dylan Thomas, Allen Ginsberg, Sylvia Plath and Robert Lowell. MacMillan Publishers, New York 1978.
14. Weinrich, Regina. “Locating a Beat Aesthetic”. The Cambridge Companion to the Beats, edited by Steven Beletto, Cambridge Unity Press, 2017, pp. 51-61.
15. Weinstein, Susan. “A Love for the Thing: The Pleasures of Rap as a Literate Practice.” Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, Vol. 50, No. 4, Dec., 2006 - Jan., 2007, pp. 270-281. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/40013745 Accessed 26 December 2022.
Published
2024-02-25
How to Cite
Pathania, S. “Ginsberg’s Howl’s Influence on the Emergence of Hip-Hop Music”. Contemporary Literary Review India, Vol. 11, no. 1, Feb. 2024, pp. 44-55, https://literaryjournal.in/index.php/clri/article/view/1246.
Section
Research Papers