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Link to original content: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Visions_of_Cody
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Visions of Cody

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Visions of Cody
First complete edition
AuthorJack Kerouac
LanguageEnglish
PublisherMcGraw-Hill
Publication date
1972
Publication placeUnited States
Media typePrint (Hardback & Paperback)
Pages448 pp
ISBN0-14-017907-0
OCLC27642070
813.54 B 20
LC ClassPS3521.E735 V5 1993
Preceded byTristessa
(1960) 
Followed byLonesome Traveler
(1960) 

Visions of Cody is an experimental novel by Jack Kerouac. It was written in 1951–1952, and though not published in its entirety until 1972, it had by then achieved an underground reputation. Since its first printing, Visions of Cody has been published with an introduction by Beat poet Allen Ginsberg titled "The Visions of the Great Rememberer."

Origins

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Visions of Cody is derived from experimental spontaneous prose inserts that Kerouac added to the original manuscript of On the Road in 1951–52. Part of the novel is a fast-forward recapitulation of the events described in On the Road, which was also about Kerouac and Neal Cassady. When Kerouac appeared on The Steve Allen Show in 1959, he secretly read from the introduction to the then-unpublished Visions of Cody although he was supposedly reading from On The Road, the book he was holding.[citation needed]

Excerpts from the novel were published by New Directions in 1959 as a 120 page, signed limited-edition of 750 copies, the entire novel being 'considered unpublishable' at the time.[1]

Book structure

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The first section of the book is essentially a collection of short stream-of-consciousness essays, which Kerouac called "sketches", many simply describing elements of Duluoz's (Kerouac's) post-World War II New York City environment, from the texture and smells of a lunch counter to St. Patrick's Cathedral, or minor events like the decision to masturbate in a public restroom—all interlaced with Kerouac's internal dialogue. Along the way through these descriptions, Duluoz meanders towards a decision to go visit Cody in San Francisco.

The second section consists mainly of the transcription of taped conversations between Kerouac and Cassady (and occasionally "Evelyn"—Cassady's last wife, Carolyn and various friends) that extended over five nights as they drank and smoked marijuana. This is followed by a brief section entitled "Imitation of the Tape," a writing experiment by Kerouac in which he attempted to work from the spontaneity and speech patterns of the tape. The remainder of the book contains Kerouac's recounting of his travels with Cassady and the effect they had on their spiraling relationship.

Character key

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Kerouac often based his fictional characters on friends and family.[2][3]

"Because of the objections of my early publishers I was not allowed to use the same personae names in each work."[4]

Real-life person Character name
Jack Kerouac Jack Duluoz
Justin W. Brierly Justin G. Mannerly
William S. Burroughs Bull Hubbard
Bill Cannastra Finistra
Lucien Carr Julien Love
Carolyn Cassady Evelyn
Neal Cassady Cody Pomeray
Hal Chase Val Hayes
Duke Chungas Duke Gringas
Henri Cru Deni Bleu
Bill Garver Harper
Allen Ginsberg Irwin Garden
Diane Hansen Diane
Luanne Henderson Joanna Dawson
Al Hinkle Slim Buckle
Helen Hinkle Helen Buckle
Jim Holmes Tom Watson
John Clellon Holmes Tom Wilson
Herbert Huncke Huck
Frank Jeffries Dave Sherman
David Kammerer Dave Stroheim
Jerry Newman Danny Richman
Edie Parker Elly
Allan Temko Allen Minko
Bill Tomson Earl Johnson
Ed Uhl Ed Wehle
Joan Vollmer June

Themes and literary style

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The novel is heavily focused on his perception of and relationship to Neal Cassady, renamed "Cody Pomeray." According to Kerouac, the book represented a vertical metaphysical study of Cassady as a character and its relationship to the general America.[5] Continuing to experiment with the spontaneous prose method he had outlined in 1950, he aimed to find "the wild form that can grow with my wild heart".[6] The tape recorder transcriptions injects the presence of speech into the text.[7] The style has been described as New Journalism fifteen years early.[8] There are several meta passages in the book in which Kerouac in the words of Allen Ginsberg "writes about writing",[9] at one point in French. Donald Allen states that the book seems self-consciously unfinished in order to convey 'an undisturbed flow from the mind of personal secret idea words'.[10]

References

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  1. ^ Blurb from 1959 limited edition
  2. ^ Sandison, David. Jack Kerouac: An Illustrated Biography. Chicago: Chicago Review Press. 1999
  3. ^ Who’s Who: A Guide to Kerouac’s Characters
  4. ^ Kerouac, Jack. Visions of Cody. London and New York: Penguin Books Ltd. 1993.
  5. ^ Preface, Kerouac, J. (1972). Visions of Cody. New York: Penguin books
  6. ^ Kerouac, letter to John Clellon Holmes, quoted on cover of 1993 Penguin books edition
  7. ^ Riley, James (December 19, 2006). "'I am a Recording Angel': Jack Kerouac's Visions of Cody and the Recording Process". Electronic Book Review.
  8. ^ McNally, D. Desolate Angel, Da Capo Press edition, 2003
  9. ^ Ginsberg, A. (1972). Visions of the Great Rememberer. Afterword, in Penguin books 1993 edition.
  10. ^ Kerouac, Jack, 'The Essentials of Spontaneous Prose' in Good Blonde and Others ed. by Donald Allen (USA: Grey Fox Press, 1993), p.73.
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