Franco American Library / Bibliothèque franco-américaine

Roots Always Precede Routes : On the Road, through a Glass Darkly

Item

Title

Roots Always Precede Routes : On the Road, through a Glass Darkly

Creator

Pacini, Peggy

Description

Critical reading of Jack Kerouac's most famous novel, "On the Road," through the lens of French mobility in America and Kerouac's Franco American cultural identity. How Kerouac's traveling characters signify and explore the "homelessness" that the article's author associates with the French Canadian and Franco American in the United States.

From the author: "This article explores the subterranean layers of 'On the Road,' firstly, approaching them from three perspectives (the dyad routes-roots, ethnogenesis and cultural geography), and secondly, considering the novel within a larger project, the 'Road' project, which allows further insight into the genesis of the 1957 edition and of the original scroll published fifty years later. This article focuses on the relationship between space, identity, travel and nation, and attempts to offer a reading of the author’s French-Canadian and Franco-American invisible ethnicity as a guiding line to the 'On the Road' proto-versions and to the themes developed (travel, mapping the land and the quest for the father[land])."

Source

Date

2011 March 28

Language

en

Type

Journal Article

Identifier

Unknown/Inconnu

Coverage

1950s
United States

ISSN

1638-1718

Publication Title

E-rea

Volume

8

Number

2