9781598532562-1598532561-The Cool School: Writing from America's Hip Underground: A Library of America Special Publication

The Cool School: Writing from America's Hip Underground: A Library of America Special Publication

ISBN-13: 9781598532562
ISBN-10: 1598532561
Edition: American First
Author: Glenn OBrien
Publication date: 2013
Publisher: Library of America
Format: Hardcover 500 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9781598532562
ISBN-10: 1598532561
Edition: American First
Author: Glenn OBrien
Publication date: 2013
Publisher: Library of America
Format: Hardcover 500 pages

Summary

The Cool School: Writing from America's Hip Underground: A Library of America Special Publication (ISBN-13: 9781598532562 and ISBN-10: 1598532561), written by authors Glenn OBrien, was published by Library of America in 2013. With an overall rating of 4.4 stars, it's a notable title among other Popular Culture (Social Sciences) books. You can easily purchase or rent The Cool School: Writing from America's Hip Underground: A Library of America Special Publication (Hardcover) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used Popular Culture books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $0.3.

Description

Who were the original hipsters? In this dazzling collection, Glenn O’Brien provides a kaleidoscopic guided tour through the margins and subterranean tribes of mid-twentieth century America—the worlds of jazz, of disaffected postwar youth, of those alienated by racial and sexual exclusion, of outlaws and drug users creating their own dissident networks. Whether labeled as Bop or Beat or Punk, these outsider voices ignored or suppressed by the mainstream would merge and recombine in unpredictable ways, and change American culture forever.

To read The Cool School is to experience the energies of that vortex. Drawing on memoirs, poems, novels, comedy routines, letters, essays, and song lyrics, O’Brien creates an unparalleled literary mix tape bringing together Henry Miller, Miles Davis, Jack Kerouac, Diane di Prima, Lenny Bruce, William S. Burroughs, Bob Dylan, Annie Ross, Norman Mailer, Terry Southern, Andy Warhol, Lester Bangs, and dozens of others, including such legendary figures as Beat avatar Neal Cassady, jazz memoirist Babs Gonzales, inspired comic improviser Lord Buckley, no-holds-barred essayist Seymour Krim, and underground filmmaker Jack Smith. His one-of-a-kind anthology recreates an unforgettable era in all its hallucinatory splendor: transgressive, raucous, unruly, harrowing, and often subversively hilarious.

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