Hard to Be a Saint in the City: The Spiritual Vision of the Beats
Robert Inchausti
Softcover | 13.97 x 1.52 x 21.84 cm | 208 pp
Shambhala Publications | 2018 | 9781611804171
The Beat writers stand out as prophets who made a valiant effort to speak the truth in the face of the establishment values of the American post-WWII period, and the fact that so much of their work has stood the test of time is testimony to their importance. The Beat movement was at heart, according to Robert Inchausti, a spiritual enterprise, and the writings compiled in this anthology provide convincing evidence for that claim.
Using his broad knowledge of Beat literature, Inchausti has created this treasury of excerpts from the writings of such figures as Jack Kerouac, Allen Ginsberg, and William S. Burroughs, but also of lesser-known Beatniks - arranged in a way that gives a shape and significance to their spiritual quest.
Included here are Kerouac's dialogues with Ginsberg and Burroughs on writing as a form of religious resistance and revelation, along with accounts of their experiments with psychedelics and visionary practices, and their shared thoughts on meditation and psychedelic experimentation as visionary practices. This is considerably more than a collection of Beat spiritual writings. It's a kind of introduction to Beat spirituality, presented systematically in the Beats' own words.
$6.77
Hard to Be a Saint in the City: The Spiritual Vision of the Beats—
$6.77

Description
Robert Inchausti
Softcover | 13.97 x 1.52 x 21.84 cm | 208 pp
Shambhala Publications | 2018 | 9781611804171
The Beat writers stand out as prophets who made a valiant effort to speak the truth in the face of the establishment values of the American post-WWII period, and the fact that so much of their work has stood the test of time is testimony to their importance. The Beat movement was at heart, according to Robert Inchausti, a spiritual enterprise, and the writings compiled in this anthology provide convincing evidence for that claim.
Using his broad knowledge of Beat literature, Inchausti has created this treasury of excerpts from the writings of such figures as Jack Kerouac, Allen Ginsberg, and William S. Burroughs, but also of lesser-known Beatniks - arranged in a way that gives a shape and significance to their spiritual quest.
Included here are Kerouac's dialogues with Ginsberg and Burroughs on writing as a form of religious resistance and revelation, along with accounts of their experiments with psychedelics and visionary practices, and their shared thoughts on meditation and psychedelic experimentation as visionary practices. This is considerably more than a collection of Beat spiritual writings. It's a kind of introduction to Beat spirituality, presented systematically in the Beats' own words.


