Buddhism and The Beats

We are thrilled to announce that starting next Saturday 10.am. EST –   Roger Jackson on the Jewel Heart site will be presenting an on-line program on “Buddhism and The Beats”

He writes:

“Almost exactly seventy years ago, Jack Kerouac began reading and writing about Buddhism with extraordinary dedication and fervor, signaling the beginning of what might be called “Beat Buddhism” – a cultural and religious phenomenon whose literary and spiritual echoes still are heard to this day.

Although there have been “heritage” Buddhists in North America since Chinese, and then Japanese, immigrants started arriving in the nineteenth century, “convert” Buddhists only began to appear on the continent in significant numbers after World War II. This development was spurred in part by the publication of ever-greater numbers of books about Buddhism, in part by East-West cultural interchanges resulting from the war – but perhaps most significantly by the literary and spiritual efforts of Kerouac and other members of the so-called “Beat Generation.”

This workshop will focus primarily on the place of Buddhism in the lives and poetry of seven Beat authors: Jack Kerouac, Philip Whalen, Gary Snyder, Diane di Prima, Bob Kaufman, Joanne Kyger, and Allen Ginsberg. We will first situate the Beats within American literary and religious history, and then explore the approach to Buddhism found in selected works of each of the poets just mentioned, seeking to understand their take on Dharma both within the context of their own lives and times and in relation to more traditional presentations of Buddhism in the premodern period and in non-western cultures. Time permitting, we also will consider the work of non-western and/or post-Beat authors like Nanao Sakaki, Chögyam Trungpa Rinpoche, and Anne Waldman. We will conclude by considering the Beats’ influence on North American Buddhism from the vantage point of the seven decades that have passed since Kerouac’s first deep dive into the Dharma.”

Check out also for Jewel Heart – postings on Gelek Rimpochehere, here, here, here, here  here and here

– from 1994 – here – Allen’s reading of “Howl” at a benefit for the institution.

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