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Nyanyian Diri dan Sepilihan Puisi Cinta
“Tiap bayangan memiliki nama;
Saat memikirkan semua yang kumiliki, aku gelisah,
Kudengar rumor tentang kemasyhuran.
Bukan untuk kebanggaan, melainkan hanya kehinaan,
Bayangan berubah menjadi tulang.
(Allen Ginsberg)”
Rumors
Cinta
Bayangan
Gelisah
The Hungryalists
“What happens to a highbrow literary culture when its fault lines-along caste, class and gender-are brutally exposed? What happens to the young iconoclasts who dare to speak and write about these issues openly? Is there such a thing as a happy ending for revolutionaries? Or are they doomed to be forever relegated to the footnotes of history?
This is the never-before-told true story of the Hungry Generation (or 'the Hungryalists')-a group of barnstorming, anti-establishment poets, writers and artists in Bengal in the 1960s. Braving social boycott, ridicule and arrests, the Hungryalists changed the literary landscape of Bengal (and many South Asian countries) forever. Along the way, they also influenced iconic poets, such as Allen Ginsberg, who struck up a lifelong friendship with the Hungryalists.”
Life
Poetry
Sixties
Revolution
Dissent
Protest
Counterculture
Samir
Ginsberg
Malay
The Hungryalists
“The Hungryalist or the hungry generation movement was a literary movement in Bengali that was launched in 1961, by a group of young Bengali poets. It was spearheaded by the famous Hungryalist quartet — Malay Roychoudhury, Samir Roychoudhury, Shakti Chattopadhyay and Debi Roy. They had coined Hungryalism from the word ‘Hungry’ used by Geoffrey Chaucer in his poetic line “in the sowre hungry tyme”. The central theme of the movement was Oswald Spengler’s idea of History, that an ailing culture feeds on cultural elements brought from outside. These writers felt that Bengali culture had reached its zenith and was now living on alien food. . . . The movement was joined by other young poets like Utpal Kumar Basu, Binoy Majumdar, Sandipan Chattopadhyay, Basudeb Dasgupta, Falguni Roy, Tridib Mitra and many more. Their poetry spoke the displaced people and also contained huge resentment towards the government as well as profanity. … On September 2, 1964, arrest warrants were issued against 11 of the Hungry poets. The charges included obscenity in literature and subversive conspiracy against the state. The court case went on for years, which drew attention worldwide. Poets like Octavio Paz, Ernesto Cardenal and Beat poets like Allen Ginsberg visited Malay Roychoudhury. The Hungryalist movement also influenced Hindi, Marathi, Assamese, Telugu & Urdu literature.”
Poetry
Sixties
Revolution
Protest
Counterculture
Hungryalism
First Person
“And then, I met him , Malay Roychoudhury, and a strange fear gripped me. Frankly, I am dead scared of such people. There is a community of artists who’re too real in their artistry. This class that charts names like, Allen Ginsberg, Amy Winehouse, Kurt Cobain and many others are Art Extremists, a term I’ve coined for them. They exert an irresistible attraction towards the opposite sex, who’re drawn to the edgy and dangerous involvement they have with their art and times. Pablo Picasso is often compared to the Minataur, the half man-half monster. Like the Minataur he demanded women to be ‘sacrificed’ to him, a view that is corroborated in his tumultuous personal life, that left behind a trail of agonized wives, mistresses and children. Malay Roychoudhury told me of a woman who was 20 years his junior and who had threatened him with suicide if he didn’t marry her. She kept her promise and drank toilet-acid.”
Love
Poetry
Death
Art
Fear
Suicide
Monster
Threat
Extrimist
Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg: The Letters
“It reminds me of a remark Lucien [Carr] once made to me: He said "You never seem to give yourself away completely, but of course dark-haired people are so mysterious.”
Jack Kerouac
Allen Ginsberg
Lucien Carr
Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg: The Letters
“He [William S Burroughs] has no patience for my kind of neurosis, I know... But since then I've been facing my nature full in the face and the result is a purge.”
Neurosis
Self Examination
Jack Kerouac
Allen Ginsberg
William S Burroughs
Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg: The Letters
“I was so sick that I found myself worrying about the future of man's soul, my own in particular.”
Sickness
Man S Search For Meaning
Philopsophy
Man S Soul
Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg: The Letters
“I hadn't thought about what any army trains for. It merely maintains itself here for no exterior purpose.”
Army
Jack Kerouac
Allen Ginsberg
Army Quotes
Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg: The Letters
“I was surprised to find such an overwhelming preponderance of nervous wrecks who cracked under the initial "strain." There is a great deal of stupidity in the management of this place. The petty officers etc. are all fat buttocked Marine sergeants with loud voices. They talk a lot about order and discipline but the administrative and ordering sections are the most confused, contradictory, undisciplined and disorderly crowd I've ever met with and the atmosphere breathes lack of definition and fosters anxiety.”
Military
Bureaucracy
Allen Ginsberg
Army Quotes Quotes
Chelsea Girls
“Allen Ginsberg asked me to sign his book. I must've stood there for five minutes drawing a complete blank. Hi Allen, from one howl to another. Dear Allen I'm glad you think I'm a poet. Love, Eileen. I'm the only woman you like, right Allen? Only the craziest thoughts passed through my mind. Finally he started getting embarrassed. Just sign it. Come by and write something better when you think of it. I scrawled something. I forget what it was.”
Allen Ginsberg
Book Signings
The Long March: How the Cultural Revolution of the 1960s Changed America
“Although aesthetically nugatory, "Beat Culture and the New America" was an exhibition of considerable significance -- but not in quite the way that Lisa Phillips, its curator, intended, Casting a retrospective glance at the sordid world of Allen Ginsberg, Jack Kerouac, William S. Burroughs, Lawrence, Ferlinghetti, and other Beat icons, the exhibition unwittingly furnished a kind of pathologist's report on one of the most toxic cultural movements in American history.”
1960s
Immorality
The Beats
Radicals
Cultural Movements
Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg: The Letters
“I've realized something utterly strange and yet common, I think I've experienced the deep turning about. At present I am completely happy and feel completely free, I love everybody and intend to go on doing so, I know that I am an imaginary blossom and so it my literary life and my literary accomplishments are so many useless imaginary blossoms. Reality isn't images. But I do things anyhow because I am free from self, free from delusion, free from anger, I love everyone equally, as equally empty and equally coming Buddhas.”
Enlightenment
Buddhism
Jack Kerouac
Allen Ginsberg
Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg: The Letters
“I have just discovered that I have no feelings, just thoughts, borrowed thoughts taken from someone I admire because he seems to have feelings.”
Thoughts
Feelings
Jack Kerouac
Allen Ginsberg
Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg: The Letters
“I decided someday to become a Thoreau of the Mountains. To live like Jesus and Thoreau, except for women.”
Solitude
Jack Kerouac
Henry David Thoreau
Allen Ginsberg
Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg: The Letters
“I want to see you. I feel more and more at with you now actually than ever before, I feel you more, actually more clarity, more confidence, more trust.”
Love
Love Quotes
Jack Kerouac
Allen Ginsberg
Longing For Love
Longing For Someone
Feeling At Home
Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg: The Letters
“Assuming I am mad (Ha!) god, how I must have suffered to go mad. And all the time I was calling to people to save me and no one put out his hand and held it. This is like suicide, only I am alive and looking out of this living death I can see the people weep and feel sorry. Alas, nobody even weeps. It's all a dream.”
Suicide
Suicide Thoughts
Jack Kerouac
Allen Ginsberg
Going Mad
Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg: The Letters
“Why are you afraid to submit to the annihilation of such stupid meaningless unreal knowledge. This is the abyss. Everything is green, love, without the logical fantastic equivocations that we invent so that we won't actually have to face each other.”
Love
Philosophy
Jack Kerouac
Allen Ginsberg
Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg: The Letters
“It's terrible never to find a father in a world chock-full of fathers of all sorts.”
Fatherhood
Fathers And Sons
Lost Boys
Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg: The Letters
“Love is only a recognition of our own guilt and imperfection, and a supplication for forgiveness to the perfect beloved. This is why we love those who are more beautiful than ourselves, why we fear them, and why we must be unhappy lovers.”
Love
Love Quotes
Lovers
Beloved
Jack Kerouac
Allen Ginsberg
Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg: The Letters
“You were right, I suppose, in keeping your distance. I was too intent on self-fulfillment, and rather crude about it, with all my harlequinade and conscious manipulation of your pity.”
Love
Unrequited Love
Beat Generation
Jack Kerouac
Allen Ginsberg
Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg: The Letters
“I'm afraid that you'll never understand me fully, and because of that, sometimes you'll be frightened, disgusted, annoyed, or pleased.”
Jack Kerouac
Allen Ginsberg
Being Understood
Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg: The Letters
“There is a kind of dreary monotony about there characters, an American sameness about them that never varies and is always dull.”
Monotony
Americans
Jack Kerouac
Allen Ginsberg
Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg: The Letters
“When you write letters to me, try not to be sophomoric and moribund about your criticisms of Jean et son weltanschauung [and his worldview.] A little more finesse, please, or if possible, a dash of humor.”
Beat Generation
Jack Kerouac
Allen Ginsberg
Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg: The Letters
“I am bored with these frantic cravings, tired of them and therefore myself, and contemptuous though tolerant of all my vast powers of self-pity and self-expressive misery.”
Misery
Introspection
Boredom
Beat Generation
Jack Kerouac
Allen Ginsberg
Self Pity
Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg: The Letters
“I do not wish to escape to myself, I wish to escape from myself. I wish to obliterate my consciousness and my knowledge of independent existence, my guilts, my secretiveness.”
Escape
Introspection
Beat Generation
Allen Ginsberg
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