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Beatnik as anarchist?
IAN VINE
Many younger anarchists are used to being called Beatniks, because it is a word which has been seized on by our free press and turned into a term of derision, to be applied indiscriminately to young non-conformists who dare to challenge the social norms in sex, dress, and mass murder. It has frequently been applied in ways very different from those intended by its originators, and unless we re-define it, is a word without real meaning.
Who then are the real Beats? Clellon Holmes described being beat as:
“… not so much weariness, as rawness of the nerves; not so much being ‘filled up to here’ as being emptied out. It describes a state of mind from which all inessentials have been stripped, leaving it receptive to everything around it, but impatient with trivial obstructions. To be beat is to be at the bottom of your personality, looking up; to be existential in the Kierkegaard, rather than the Jean-Paul Sartre sense.”
Kerouac says:
“… we seek to find new phrases … a tune, a thought, that will someday be the only tune and thought in the world and which will raise men’s souls to joy.”
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But these are only the spokesmen. Most beats do not think in such high-
flown terms as these. Most society disaffiliates will admit to sharing
some of the ideas and feelings of Kerouac,
Ginsberg, and
Mailer, whether they be anarchists or not, but most will not be Beat in the extreme sense. Similarly, by no means all of the definitive Beat characteristics are possessed by these writers.
I shall then confine my use of the word to a particular extreme group, which is in fact that furthest outside society, and which happens to coincide remarkably closely with what the Sunday papers would have us believe is the norm amongst nuclear disarmers. Actually, although statistics are impossible, I doubt if these are more than a few hundred such beats in the whole of the British Isles.
These real beatniks are often visually distinctive, the boys frequently having beards, long hair, threadbare jeans, sandals, and a variety of eccentric coats and neck-ties, while the girls, except for the beards, are more or less the same. But appearances can be confusing, for there are a large number of other social rebels who adopt the same or similar uniforms without adopting the Beat philosophy and way of life. These range from art students and anarchists to the dissident sons of aristocrats, and to attempt to analyse their ideas and motivations would take a book in itself. One interesting point is that the <span data-html="true" class="plainlinks" title="Wikipedia: bowler-hats">bowler-hats and starched collars of the “ravers” are usually absent among the real beats—an indication that they largely eschew the ostentation of oddity for oddity’s sake.
Perhaps the most interesting characteristic of the beat is his restlessness. The average beat (if such an animal exists) likes to be “on the road”, always moving on, never forming fixed attachments with his environment. Although there are certain recognised “scenes”, there are few permanent beat communities. The population in any given town is constantly changing as someone moves on, perhaps not to return for a year, and someone-
else “makes town”. The traditional method of travel is hitching lifts, and if you can con the driver for a meal and a few
fags then so much the better. It is remarkable how far some beats travel by this means, most have covered almost the whole of Britain this way, and many have travelled widely abroad. One who was recently in
Bristol for the winter was last heard of in the
Sahara nuclear testing area, being looked after by the
Foreign Legion. The relevance of all this to anarchists may be questioned, but it brings me to my first main contention: that the beat has found a solution to the problem of how to remain almost entirely free in an authoritarian society. His solution may not be to our liking, but
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because he has one he is certainly worthy of our serious attention.
Needless to say, they have bought their freedom at a price. Most of them do not work, and few can afford a “pad” of their own. Occasionally a flat is taken over by a small group who happen to have found an easy means of temporary employment, but this never lasts for long, either because the landlord is getting no rent, or because of the intolerance of neighbours. Most of them will if necessary, rough it under a hedge or in a bus shelter, but normally they will stick to scenes where someone is prepared to put them up for a few days or weeks. They do in fact depend largely on charity, which is usually pretty freely given, usually by someone on the beat fringe who has a permanent pad. Frequently their only possession is a sleeping bag, and occasionally even these get lost en route. And that too can be an advantage if it gets you the spare mattress.
Work is definitely frowned on (and when it’s not there aren’t many employers who would employ a long-haired, bearded, unwashed beat), but few beatniks draw national assistance or unemployment benefit. This is not through any laudable refusal to be involved in the dealings of a capitalist system, or a matter of conscience, but mainly because most of them are ineligible to draw them. They are vagrants in the most literal sense, and apart from having no fixed address dislike having to stay in one area, and being obliged to present themselves regularly in front of some hostile official. This is not only an assertion of their freedom, but also provides their second, and inevitable, claim to being anarchists, namely their hatred of orders and authority.
They are of course not alone in this respect, since they share the same characteristic with the teds as well as with us, but they differ from most groups who detest the police in that they are not interested in wasting time in contemplating libertarian utopias, they prefer to enjoy life here and now. Ignoring all that doesn’t happen to suit them, their search for living involves them in the drugs and alcoholic excesses which delight the Fleet Street snoopers; and their disregard for “trivialities” makes them unenthusiastic bathers—especially as few of them have a change of clothes anyway. All this horrifies the righteous, but criticism means nothing to them. If we can consider them as anarchists we should never expect them to help propagate the anarchist cause or listen to our criticisms. The typical beat could by no stretch of the imagination be called “politically minded”. It is true that many of them wear CND badges, and even march with us at Aldermaston, but they’ll never be found at political meetings or civil-disobedience demos. Their reason is common enough—their ability to see through the humbug of politicians, and their disbelief that anything can ever remove them. Most of them have packed more into 20 years experience than the “squares” do into 70, and they are cynical in the extreme. This is one very significant beat characteristic—there is no desire to influence or convert, each beatnik is his own philosopher and his own master, and is happy to remain such.
Despite the divergence here from the anarchist aim of promoting change I feel we have still something to learn from the beats. One
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important positive virtue they have is their close community and co-
operative sense. This has been effectively described by
Colin Wilson in his novel “Adrift in Soho”, but an example from my own experience should help make the point. Recently a group of eight or so spent a couple of weeks in Bristol. Each evening they would congregate in the local left wing pub (where the landlord far prefers them to the teds), and sit around talking, singing, and
cadging drinks—
which were freely shared—
while one played guitar for hours on end, both for enjoyment and to entertain the attentive crowd. Towards closing-
time the prettiest girls would go round with beer mug, sidling up to listeners and asking “Put some money in the glass, for the singer?” By doing a very effective “poor little girl” act they would bring in several shillings in a few minutes. This would then be counted out on the table and divided up between the group, either equally or dependent on need. Likewise, one beat would assiduously collect all the dogends from the ashtrays and these would then be taken back to the pad for a communal roll-up.