Saturday, October 12, 2019
Importance of Mountains in Kerouacs Dharma Bums and Barthelmes The Gl
Importance of Mountains in Kerouac's Dharma Bums and Barthelme's The Glass  Mountain         Ã  Ã  Ã   Mountains are  significant in the writing of Jack Kerouac and Donald Barthelme as symbolic  representations of achievement and the isolation of an individual from the  masses of the working class in industrialized capitalist American society. The  mountains, depicted by Kerouac and Barthelme, rise above the American landscape  as majestic entities whose peaks are touched by few enduring and brave souls.  The mountains of Kerouac's The Dharma Bums symbolize personal freedom and  accomplishment through achieving a connection with nature distant from the  constraints of materialism and a polluted industrialized American society.  Barthelme's "Glass Mountain," however, envisions a mountain removed from nature  as a modern skyscraper office building, an edifice that embodies the degradation  of an emerging American society in the 1960s that is in search of "the American  Dream" through material or monetary gains. "The Glass Mountain" remarks on the  movement of Americans away    from nature, religion, and humanity as they look to  false golden idols (the golden castle at the top of the mountain) for  inspiration to be successful, while Kerouac's The Dharma Bums emphasizes a  return to nature and devout religiousness to inspire virtues of charity,  kindness, humility, zeal, tranquility, wisdom, and ecstasy (p. 5). The top of  the mountain, for both authors, represents a fearful ascent from the masses of  the working class huddled in polluted cities in order to achieve a heightened  state of knowledge and success, but both explorers fall short of true  fulfillment because they are never far removed from human flaws of greed,  excess, and materia...              ...est of the world from  the top is better than actually doing it. The mountains also represent the  struggle of the lower classes in American society to achieve wealth for the sake  of happiness and fulfillment. What Americans seeking wealth do not realize is  that the top is a lonely place, devoid of the longing for material possession  that keeps them going in life. The thrill of climbing the mountain, or the  corporate ladder, is always more rewarding than looking down from the top to see  the ugliness of the city below and regretting that they must return to this  ugliness of competition and greed in order to sustain their own pitiful human  existence.      Ã       Bibliography      Barthelme, Donald. "The Glass Mountain." The New American Poetry., Allen,  Donald, ed. Berkeley, Ca.: U. Calif. Press, 1999.     Kerouac, Jack. The Dharma Bums. New York: Penguin.,  1976.                      
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