Jack Kerouac, Buddhism, and the American Search for Enlightenment
By (Author) Sarah F. Haynes
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
12th December 2024
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Aspects of religion
Literature: history and criticism
294.3
Hardback
224
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
Sarah Haynes provides a detailed analysis of Jack Kerouacs unpublished diaries and Buddhist writing alongside the Buddhism presented in his published works. Kerouacs involvement with Buddhism is traditionally accepted to have occurred between 1953-1958. However, his unpublished diaries reveal that he continued to write about Buddhism until at least 1967. Haynes comparative analysis of Kerouac's unpublished documents provides a richer and more complete understanding of Kerouac's Buddhist practice. She reflects on the differences between the themes in Kerouacs published and unpublished Buddhism, arguing that Kerouacs Buddhism is based in his search for stability, which is contradictory to the messages in his published works. Kerouacs unpublished writings reveal his inability to actualize the lifestyle he promoted. Despite this conflict, however, the impact and legacy of Kerouacs religious vision on the development of Buddhism in America is significant.
Sarah F. Haynes is Professor of Asian Religions and Director of the Master of Liberal Arts & Sciences Program in the Department of Liberal Arts & Sciences at the Western Illinois University, USA.