LEON LEVINSTEIN
Suspenders, 1955
gelatin silver print, 14 x 11 inches (35.6 x 27.9 cm.)
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@beatnikjives
LEON LEVINSTEIN
Suspenders, 1955
gelatin silver print, 14 x 11 inches (35.6 x 27.9 cm.)
Old stuff on We Heart It.
Fifties Flashback: The Beat Generation “Great things are not accomplished by those who yield to trends and fads and popular opinion.” – Jack Kerouac. The Beat Generation was a revolutionary counterculture movement formed in the late 1940s and which then transpired as a mainstream symbol of youth and rebellion during the 1950s. Founded by a group of subversive and intellectual poets and writers, the original ‘Beats’ included the likes of Allen Ginsberg, William S. Burroughs and the now iconic Jack Kerouac. Kerouac himself coined the movement’s name ‘beat’ to mean a non-conformist group of tired, warn-out youths; exhausted by war, oppression and social expectations. The Beats were, for want of a better word, the original hippies. The origin of the movement started primarily in Greenwich Village, New York, with the members meeting in bars and coffee shops to discuss art, poetry, literature, society and sexuality. This young group of bohemians were recovering from the devastation of WW2 and were very much uninspired by the standard American expectations of working a 9-5, getting married, having a mortgage and raising children. They wanted more from life. They wanted to travel, experiment with drugs and sexuality, to study Eastern religions, write, paint and most of all; to be free. By 1955, the movement had advanced to other areas of the U.S such as Washington D.C and San Francisco. The Beats had gained wide-spread popularity through their writings, most of which was considered subversive and controversial for its time. The founding members often toured the U.S and Mexico performing readings of their work to students and fellow bohemians. Kerouac, Ginsberg and Burroughs never particularly set out to form a social revolution, they themselves just wanted to live by their own accord and liberate themselves. They considered themselves as outsiders, but soon came to realise that their progressive desires were quietly gnawing away in the minds of many young Americans. Although laced with controversy and often dubbed communists and radicals, the movement coursed rapidly through the veins of popular culture, heavily-influencing the rising Rock N Roll stars of the 1950s such as Elvis Presley, and later Buddy Holly and The Beatles. The misspelling of the latter’s name being no coincidence. The Beats are widely credited with being the quiet rebels who gave birth to the 1960s cultural revolution, which expanded so diversely into other areas such as music, cinema and most importantly, political shifts such as the Civil Rights and the Feminist Movements. Post-Beat youths of the last four generations who believe in artistic expression, human rights, liberation, freedom of speech, equality and individualism owe it all the Beat Generation. ©clarataylor2013
Beat memories (1953-1963).
Allen Ginsberg
"William S. Burroughs con aspecto serio, ojos de amante triste, la luz de la tarde en sombras, la portada de su novela ‘Yonqui’ recién publicada en sombras sobre su hombro derecho, una cometa japonesa contra el viejo papel de pared de su apartamento con agua caliente en el Lower East Side. Había vuelto de su estancia en Méjico y Sudámerica para editar manuscritos conmigo. Nueva York, Otoño, 1953."
"William S. Burroughs looking serious, sad lover’s eyes, afternoon light in window, cover of just-published JUNKIE propped in shadow above right shoulder, japanese kite against Lower East Side hot water old flat’s wallpaper. He’d come up from South America & Mexico to stay with me editing […] manuscripts. New York, Fall 1953."
Beatniks, Greenwich Village, NYC early 1960s by Robert Otter
New York Trip by TheGlassEye.ca on Flickr.
The fact that everybody in the world dreams every night ties all mankind together.
Jack Kerouac, Book of Dreams (1961)
The Giant Underwood Master Typewriter (1939-40)
The 1939-40 New York World’s Fair was hosted in the Flushing Meadows Park in Queens. It was the first to be based on the future with the slogan “Dawn of a New Day.” An estimated 44 million people attended. At the Underwood Elliott Fisher exhibit in the Business Systems Building an unusual item was on display – a typewriter. However, it was not any ordinary typewriter but rather it was The Giant Underwood Master Typewriter.
Atlas and the weight of the world. Across from St. Patrick’s Cathedral. New York City. 1950s.
Photographer: Frank Oscar Larson
Concentrate on what you want to say to yourself and your friends. Follow your inner moonlight; don’t hide the madness. You say what you want to say when you don’t care who’s listening.
Allen Ginsberg (via firstlightofdawn)