Saturday, June 1, 2019
Jack Kerouacââ¬â¢s On The Road - Ranting of a Maniac or Precise Interpreta
Jack Kerouacs On the Road Ranting of a Maniac or distinct Interpretation of Reality? Jack Kerouacs On the Road is considered the bible of the Beat Generation, illustrating the wild, wandering, and reckless lifestyle chosen by many young people of the time. despite all of Dean and Sals partying and pleasure-cruising, On the Road ends up being a sad and disturbing story. During all the trips, through the good times and the bad times, thither is a sense of darkness and foreboding following in the wake. Kerouacs point was not to put on display the wild and good times the vanquish were having, but rather to expose their way of life as a simple flight from reality and responsibility. The sadness of this novel is due to the accumulation of consequences stemming from the characters irresponsibleness and general lack of direction. Dean and Sal, however, never fully admit this to themselves. Part of the storys beauty is Sals non-judgmental narrative. To preserve this, Kerouac must careful ly incorporate these views while leaving Sal more or less oblivious to them. This is done using other characters to implant the notion of looming responsibility and reality into the story, and to spend to the reader that life really is more serious than Sal admits in his narration. While Deans home base is a wifes house throughout most of the story, Sal has his aunt, a dependable and caring woman who vocalizes her opinions of his lifestyle and friends. Chapter Five begins with Sals brief word of her feelings. My aunt said I was wasting my time hanging around with Dean and his gang. I knew that was wrong, too. Life is life, and kind is kind. (129) Here Kerouac uses Sals own commentary to farm his point across. While Sal ... ...een set aside. Carlo continues his speech The days of wrath are yet to come. The balloon wont sustain you much longer.... Youll all go flying to the watt Coast and come staggering back in search of your stone. (130) Is this the ranting of a maniacal ty pist, or a precise interpretation of reality vigorously inserted by the author? Kerouacs method of inserting ideas through Sals narration allows him to incorporate an important differing point of view that Sal is incapable of until the very end of the story. Had Kerouac not wanted to communicate these ideas, Sal could just as easily have not mentioned these instances, or described them in a different light. Without the opinions of these other characters, the book would be one-sided, and quite a bit more shallow in its message. Works CitedKerouac, Jack.On the Road. New York Penguin Books, 1975.
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