Gør som tusindvis af andre bogelskere
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The combined events of the end of the American Civil War in 1865, the first transcontinental railroad opening in 1869, and the financial crash of 1873, found large numbers - including thousands of former soldiers well used to an outdoor life and tramping - thrown into a transient life and forced to roam the continent, surviving on whatever resources came to hand. For most, the life of the hobo was born out of necessity. For a few it became a lifestyle choice. Some of the latter group committed their adventures to print, both autobiographical and fictional, and together with their British and Irish counterparts, whose wanderlust was fuelled by an altogether different genesis, they account for the fifteen tramp writers whose stories and ideas are the subject of this book.
Rebel, seeker, traveler, observer, vagabond. Writer and poet Jim Christy hasbeen called all these things and more. Inspired at age twelve after reading JackKerouac's On The Road one summer while running wild in the streets of his tough-as-nails, mob-run South Philadelphia neighborhood, Christy began hislife-long habit of following the wind.In his seventy-plus years, Christy asserted his freedom of spirit as a vagabondadventurer, latter-day hobo, journalist, private eye, actor, musician, and artistin over fifty countries around the globe, and still found time to write over thirtybooks of memoir and poetry. Christy's life and stories are an essential link in thehistory of rebel talents: those rare souls who shift our perspective by choosing tolive their lives outside of accepted cultural mores. Ian Cutler interviews Christy,his friends, and his family to assemble this fascinating and inspiring biography ofa man who can genuinely be called the last of the Beat Generation.
Cynicism began as a school of philosophy inspired by Socrates and castigated by commentators as a social pathology, a nihilistic rebellion against the fundaments of civilization. This book attempts to vindicate cynicism by exposing it as both a progressive approach to social dilemmas and an enlightened understanding of the human condition.
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