This volume is a study of eight major novels from the postwar period (1945–65) in conjunction with the films made from them during a later period of a little less than three decades straddling the millennium (1985–2012). The comparison of these novels (by Ken Kesey, Paul Bowles, Carson McCullers, Jack Kerouac, James Baldwin, Alexander Trocchi, William Burroughs, and Peter Matthiessen) with their film adaptations offers the opportunity for a historical reassessment not only of the novelsthemselves but also of the global counterculture of the years 1965–75, which they prefigure in a variety of ways. Appearing more than a decade after the waning of the counterculture and in some cases as much as fifty years after the novels on which they are based, the films display significant revisions and omissions prompted by the historical and cultural changes of the intervening years. Whereas these changes are nowadays often interpreted in purely political terms, this book argues that the experience of mystery and its decline is central to the novels and films and is a key feature of the period of cultural transformation that they bookend. At once a work of literary criticism, film studies, and cultural history, this book has the potential to reach both an academic audience and the broader readership that has long existed for these novels as well as the even broader one interested in reappraising the period of the global counterculture—among the most important of the influences that have shaped the contemporary world.
Author(s): Gary Hentzi
Series: Routledge Studies in Twentieth-Century Literature
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2022
Language: English
Pages: 287
City: New York
Cover
Half Title
Series Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Table of Contents
Preface
Chapter 1 After the Rebellion: The Postwar Counterculture and Its Legacy
Chapter 2 The Sands of Abjection in The Sheltering Sky
Chapter 3 The Ballad of the Sad Café and the Worldhood of the World
Chapter 4 On the Road and the Varieties of Religious Experience
Chapter 5 The Visionary Cinema of James Baldwin: Mystery and Contradiction in Go Tell It on the Mountain
Chapter 6 Counterculture Revisited: Young Adam Fifty Years Later
Chapter 7 The Gay Science of William Burroughs: Naked Lunch on Page and Screen
Chapter 8 At Play in the Fields of the Lord and the Ethnographic Imagination
Chapter 9 Mystery, Myth, and Ritual: The Aftermath of the Counterculture
Index