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America's New Trinity of Love: Dean, Brando, Presley by Jack Kerouac
https://www.facebook.com/ted.dumas.104/posts/10203262460841228?comment_id=10203262675486594&notif_t=like ^ | 1957 | Jack Kerouac

Posted on 07/31/2015 7:15:45 PM PDT by sushiman

America's New Trinity of Love: Dean, Brando, Presley

by Jack Kerouac

Love is sweeping the country.

While wars and riots rage all around the world, in a vortex that resembles the dying Dinosaur Age of Violence, here within her sweeter shores America is producing a Revolution of Love. Three young men of exceptional masculine beauty and compassion and sadness have been upraised by its reaching hands.

This is strange and it is good. Up to now the American Hero has always been on the defensive: he killed Indians and villains and beat up his rivals and surled. He has been good-looking but never compassionate except at odd moments and only in stock situations. Now the new American hero, as represented by the trinity of James Dean, Marlon Brando and Elvis Presley, is the image of compassion in itself. And this makes him more beautiful than ever. It is as though Christ and Buddha were about to come again with masculine love for the woman at last. All gone are the barriers of asceticism and the barriers of ancient anti-womanism that go deep into primitive religion. It is a Revolution of Love and it will become a Religion of Love. The Garden of Eden might come back in its pristine form. The old American Hero fought the Devil; the new American Hero knows that the Devil never existed except in the minds of anxiety. There will be no more tempting of the woman by the Devil and no banishment from the paradise on earth.

It's got to be. A Revolution of Love is the positive answer; banishment of war and the Bomb is only a negative answer. There have been Revolutions of Love before, accomplished always by some isolated individual like Cassanova, Valentino, Sinatra. But now the intensity and the need is such, that there are more than one. It's not a vain and self centered thing, but it spreads. This is implicit in the James Dean movie "Rebel Without A Cause" where, when the hero and the girl sneak off to make love in the empty mansion, leaving the desperate boy alone (Sal Mineo), and all the trouble takes place, Dean says: "We shouldn’t have left him alone," the girl says "But I needed you," and Dean states "But he needed you too." This is child-like and innocent. "Suffer the little ones to come unto me." There is the need all around to be recognized and adored by some other human being, the need all around for kindness, for the ideal of love which does not exclude cruelty but is all-embracing, non-assertive, simply lovely. Not necessarily the Dionysian orgy but the tender communion.

As always when something new grows out of the groaning earth, this earth which is a recent event in the cosmic eternity of light, there are angry complaints raised from all stations. The dryer intellectuals complain that the adulation of the dead James Dean by thousands of American girls represents a kind of unhealthy necrophilia; they point out the fact that 1,000 fan letters a month are still being written to Dean as though he were still alive, asking for his pictures and asking him to come back because they love him. "Even if you look bad and you're all cut up from your car-crash, come back anyway." Yet if Ste. Teresa can make us the holy promise that she will come back and shower the earth with roses forever, this belief in the immortal lovingness of James Dean by thousands of eager believing chicks is well-rooted in a reverential mystical tradition that has certainly never harmed the sleeping babe in his crib. It augurs well for the world that it will refuse to believe that in death endeth loveliness, or endeth enlightenment.

Elegant complainers say Marlon Brando is ill-dressed, vain, self-centered, Kowalski-Terry Malloy hoodlumish, irresponsible; they picture him as wandering away to leave his girl crying. Yet what is it he has?--that made a girl say "I just feel that Marlon Brando would know how to love me better than any man in the world, that he would go skipping down the street with me hand-in-hand, that he would do anything I asked him, and be kind. Because his soul is free and that's why he's so beautiful!"... Brando is indeed a free soul; his individual approach to his work as well as to his way of life bespeak a strong faith in himself as a man and as an American.

Jack Kerouac, 1957


TOPICS: Books/Literature
KEYWORDS:

1 posted on 07/31/2015 7:15:45 PM PDT by sushiman
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To: sushiman
Pardon me, but do you have any peppermint tea?

I need to rinse my mouth out.

2 posted on 07/31/2015 7:19:32 PM PDT by Harmless Teddy Bear (Proud Infidel, Gun Nut, Religious Fanatic and Freedom Fiend)
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To: sushiman
This crap; was written in 1957 and is even more meaningless today, than is was back then !
3 posted on 07/31/2015 7:20:31 PM PDT by nopardons
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To: sushiman

This is what happens when a person who has no real talent for writing, writes.


4 posted on 07/31/2015 7:27:37 PM PDT by Flycatcher (God speaks to us, through the supernal lightness of birds, in a special type of poetry.)
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To: sushiman

Cowboy Neal at the wheel on a trip to never-never land


5 posted on 07/31/2015 7:47:34 PM PDT by PlateOfShrimp
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To: sushiman
Up to now the American Hero has always been on the defensive: he killed Indians and villains and beat up his rivals and surled. He has been good-looking but never compassionate except at odd moments and only in stock situations. Now the new American hero, as represented by the trinity of James Dean, Marlon Brando and Elvis Presley, is the image of compassion in itself.

The traditional American hero was alive and well in the pop culture of 1957. While those metrosexual types that Kerouac raved about had their following, millions were trooping into the theaters to watch Richard Widmark seek out Russian spies in Pickup on South Street, Robert Mitchum match wits with a German submarine commander in The Enemy Below and Kevin McCarthy as he battled the artichoke people in The Invasion of the Body Snatchers.

6 posted on 07/31/2015 7:52:43 PM PDT by Fiji Hill
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To: sushiman
For James Dean fans:
7 posted on 07/31/2015 7:57:43 PM PDT by Fiji Hill
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To: sushiman

Amazing Video!

Elvis Presley video | Click to watch!
8 posted on 07/31/2015 8:10:06 PM PDT by Bon mots
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To: nopardons

I no pardon you for your comment gringo .


9 posted on 07/31/2015 8:23:55 PM PDT by sushiman
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To: Flycatcher

Go catch a fly and eat it .


10 posted on 07/31/2015 8:24:25 PM PDT by sushiman
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To: Bon mots

What is your point ?????????????????????????????????????


11 posted on 07/31/2015 8:33:42 PM PDT by sushiman
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To: sushiman

Eat some sushi, man.


12 posted on 07/31/2015 8:46:33 PM PDT by Flycatcher (God speaks to us, through the supernal lightness of birds, in a special type of poetry.)
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To: sushiman
Tough!

Both Brandon and Dean were bi-sexual/queer and Kerouac was a dissolute counter-culture creep. Jack and his mostly unhappy b and led the way to the COMMIE takeover of the culture and the damnedable hippies.

13 posted on 07/31/2015 8:56:13 PM PDT by nopardons
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To: sushiman

Jack Kerouac supported the war in Vietnam (against his sodomite pals Burroughs and Ginsberg) and he liked President Ike.


14 posted on 07/31/2015 9:07:32 PM PDT by a fool in paradise ("Psychopathia Sexualis, I'm in love with a horse that comes from Dallas" - Lenny Bruce (1958))
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To: sushiman

I just thought it was funny.
Relax.
It’s Friday.


15 posted on 07/31/2015 9:08:08 PM PDT by Bon mots
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