Difference between revisions of "Beatnik"

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Beatnik is a term for an anti-materialistic, unambitious culture of people in the late 1950s analogous to hippies a decade later.  The term was coined by Herb Caen on April 2, 1958 in an article in the San Francisco Chronicle.  He modified an earlier, more positive term [[Beat Generation]] and added the -nik suffix from [[Sputnik]], which had launched in the prior six months.
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'''Beatnik''' is a term for an anti-materialistic culture of people in the late 1950s, analogous to [[hippies]] a decade later.  The term was coined by Herb Caen on April 2, 1958 in an article in the ''San Francisco Chronicle''.  He modified an earlier, more positive term Beat Generation and added the -nik suffix from [[Sputnik]], which had launched in the prior six months.
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Beatniks were associated with poetry and jazz. [[Jack Kerouac]]'s novel ''[[On the Road]]'' was viewed by many as the Beat Generation's manifesto.
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[[Category:Culture]]

Latest revision as of 20:21, June 23, 2016

Beatnik is a term for an anti-materialistic culture of people in the late 1950s, analogous to hippies a decade later. The term was coined by Herb Caen on April 2, 1958 in an article in the San Francisco Chronicle. He modified an earlier, more positive term Beat Generation and added the -nik suffix from Sputnik, which had launched in the prior six months.

Beatniks were associated with poetry and jazz. Jack Kerouac's novel On the Road was viewed by many as the Beat Generation's manifesto.