Sunday, October 27, 2013

My Prediction


Firstly, I would like to comment on the fact that it was difficult to remember the events of the past readings because of how long it had been since our last posts. Furthermore, after reviewing the previous posts and what we had discussed, I must say that I was surprised with what unfolded in Chapter 11. Prior to the reading, I expected a greater focus on one of the main characters. I expected Jack Kerouac to make use of either Sal or Dean in an effort to create more development in the novel. However, I was evidently mistaken as the novel plays on with just more time “on the road”. To continue, although Kerouac arguably characterizes Sal to a greater extent in this chapter, I believe that the novel still revolves around the concept of hitchhiking and reaching the west. 
As I already suggested to Felipe, I believe that the novel (according to its title) will continue to take place “on the road”. In other words, as of now I believe that the central focus in the novel will be the journey rather than any specific character. In addition, I no longer think that Kerouac will manipulate any of the characters in an attempt to communicate the theme to his audience. Instead, I believe that the point of the novel might just be to characterize the personality of the country. Perhaps the author is using the personification of the country as a tool to illustrate the fascinating aspects of society. To conclude, I look forward to what the next reading of On the Road has to offer and whether or not my prediction will be supported.

Loneliness of San Francisco

One of the things that Sal has done best in this novel is traveling. Other than New Jersey, Sal has not been able to stay in one place for long; he has spent most of the novel running. I think that he is running so that he doesn’t give himself enough time to think. He is scared of himself and his mistakes and is refusing to face the guilt that comes along with facing reality. He knows that this has been a sorry excuse of experiencing the West, and has instead been a collection of meaningless experiences that have actually had no affect on him.
            There’s an aspect of Sal that hasn’t really been addressed, that he has idealized from the beginning of the novel the idea of the West, and yet while traveling he has hung out only with those who he knew from the East cost.  He has done very little to immerse himself in the Western culture. He has mostly done the opposite; instead, he has insulted, stolen from, and threatened the locals, the people actually from the West.
A lot of the group members have talked about how they were surprised by the flow of the novel, that they were used to the beginning and conclusion of a chapter marking the beginning and conclusion of a new idea and that On the Road does not following this rule. I recently read that the original manuscript of On the Road was one fifty-foot long roll of paper. I don’t think that Kerouac wanted the reader to feel the same lack of order and reason that Sal and his friends were living their lives by. How their decisions are made on a whim, and that they carelessly float through their lives. It would be at least somewhat honorable if it made them happy, but they just feel nothing.

Back On the Road


It's definitely been a while since I have read this book because I was apparently not expecting Sal's obligatory fawning over Dean at the start of Chapter 11. In the sort of writing that we have come to expect, Kerouac begins the chapter with a description of setting, more specifically of Sal describing his recent travels in such a way that we are told where he has been with his own personal touch to it, which is one thing I think Kerouac does really well: I always feel as though Sal is talking to me. Although, if he was actually talking to me I feel like I would not be able to take it for very long given that we cannot go two sentences in to a chapter without mention of Sal's not-so-secret men-crush, Dean Moriarty. Sal is about to give his brief description of Salt Lake City when he feels the need to mention that it is "the least likely place for Dean to have been born,". Now, perhaps this isn't necessarily "fawning" but I find it difficult to not chuckle any time Sal mentions Dean because he so often fawns over him.
Despite the frequency at which Sal exposes his totally platonic obsession with Dean, I have today reached a breakthrough in my own little obsession: "Dean vs Setting: Battle for the Title of Main Character". Sal mentions Dean very often, this is true, but just like the aforementioned example these mentionings are always breaks from his describing the setting- no matter how often he talks about Dean, he talks about his journey and environment even more. I still believe that Dean is more likely to be the story's protagonist than Sal, however even if this were to be the case Dean is taking a back seat to the setting, which I believe is the thing Kerouac really cares about.
We have previously discussed the presence of sexism in this story and I think there is a consensus that it is so present because of the time period in which the book is set. I believe Kerouac does a fantastic job of flushing out the setting through details like that, and in Chapter 11 we start to see the presence of racism, and like Sal's comments about Dean and like the sexism- the racism is not really given any sort of special attention, it kind of just happens and the story carries on because the only one who should notice it is the reader. There is no point where Sal just straight out says "Man, do I hate minorities" but the use of the word "Negro", which most of the modern English-speaking world recognizes as at least a little racist, and the way in which it is used denotes the racist undertones in this time period. 
While I do love talking about how well Kerouac describes setting, I suppose I should make a more constructive point, and that point is likely that on every page, no matter what is happening, whether Dean is there or not, the setting is going to be described to us. This is consistent and without fail. The question I had about this book I think I have now resolved, I now believe that the setting is without a doubt the main focus of this story and all the characters are minor in comparison. Think about the different characters, even Dean, think about how little they have really been described to us. We know so little about these people and yet the setting is being described to us constantly. I'm still not sure what kind of story Kerouac has tried to write, but I am sure that the setting was made more important than the characters.

The Question of a Lifetime: “Who Am I?”


This week, through the context of the text and the positions that my group members took during our video blog, I have come to the conclusion that Sal can not answer the question “who am I”. Although it takes a lifetime in order to provide a sufficient response to this question, Sal possesses no sense of self as he is physically present in the world; however, mentally he has distanced himself into a alternative reality of loneliness. Sal has the  unique yet harmful ability to adapt and transform into different personalities based on his perceived surroundings. This is the basis to my argument that Sal not only does not know who he is as a human being, but also, he cannot improve upon himself through his journey on the road.
Sal cannot became a clone of Dean or anyone else that he encounters, but rather, in order to feel the sense of completeness that he has traveled thousands of miles for, he needs to come into his own body and most importantly love himself as he is. For if one wants to constantly change themselves to be like others, there is no ‘I’ in the equation. The free spirit that he longs for cannot be answered by geography even though the west, although somewhat different than the east, is still part of this Earth. If Sal wants to truly change, he needs to go a road to find himself and observe his behaviors rather those of Deans’ or anyone else's.
It seems as if at this point of the novel, there is no hope for Sal. The reason to the question who is the true narrator of the novel that Kerouac presents his reader is formed because Sal is not providing his reader with a fully descriptive and enthralling point of view due to the fact that he cannot mentally or emotionally be fully present in the world.  The question becomes will Sal be able to snap out of this hypnotic trance that he has trapped himself in, or will he remain stuck in that alternate universe for the remainder of the novel.

Nothing but a "haggard ghost" (Meagan Adler)



        In this week’s reading, Sal, “weatherbeaten and gray” (pg.55), becomes bored with his own mundanely dull life out west.  The reader almost feels a sense of relief as he finally comes to the realization that his westward journey has not changed his naively mediocre personality.  He is that “haggard ghost” (pg.54) trying to search for a new identity that is seemingly nonexistent.  Furthermore, he is consumed by a hopeless sense of dejection as desperately asks himself, “Oh where is this girl I love?” (pg.71).  Prior to his journey Sal is preoccupied with the false sense of hope that he will become a changed man as he begins his journey on “Route 6 across America” (pg.71), yet he now comes to the realization that as he comes to the end of America he has “nowhere to go but back” (pg.71).  He becomes “completely bored” (pg.65) not only with the dull Banana King Remi praises, but with life itself out west.  Sal realizes that he has nobody and is a nobody and that he lives in solitude in the “loneliness of San Francisco” (pg.67).  In my opinion, I feel like Sal has to find himself before he can find this girl he is looking for.  He has almost a sense of innocent naivety, in which makes him an easy target for people like Remi to influence.  If anything, Sal has become slightly changed for the worse, as he realizes he is a “natural-born thief” (pg.65), like everyone else in America.  I particularly powerful point of the reading was when Sal second guessingly asks himself “Why had I come here?” (pg.69); this shows that he doubts his decision to become this transformed man in the west.  Overall, through this weeks reading I realize that I no longer sympathize with Sal because he is such a uninterestingly characterless narrator.