AbstractsAnthropology

Liminality on the Road: Exploring te Margins of Post-World War II America

by Maxime Zech




Institution: Leiden University
Department:
Year: 2016
Keywords: Kerouac; Liminality; Anthropology; Literature; Identity; marginality; frontier; America; authenticity; counterculture
Posted: 02/05/2017
Record ID: 2076222
Full text PDF: http://hdl.handle.net/1887/38374


Abstract

This thesis re-views Jack Kerouac's 'On The Road' through the cultural-anthropological lens of 'liminality' in order to understand the novel's endurance as well as its contemporary reflection of a generation in limbo. This thesis contends that the liminal characteristics and rituals studied by Arnold van Gennep and Victor Turner in small-scale African communities can be modernized and applied to such ritualistic phenomena as road travel in Kerouac's novel, which utilizes the anonymity of the American highway as a liminal space that allows freedom of self-definition. Such a reading returns 'On the Road' to its contemporary socio-political landscape and makes it clear that the novel depicts not a subversive countercultural movement, but that it is actually part of a private ritual of passage that eschews the mainstream culture only on a temporary and minimal basis. By way of the liminal phase, the narrator appropriates characteristics of the socially and ethnically marginal while reproducing and reinforcing the values of the mainstream (white) culture against these marginal people. Advisors/Committee Members: Kardux, Johanna C (advisor).