Religions (Jan 2024)

<i>The Dharma Bums</i>: A (Fictional) Pseudo-Buddhist Hagiography, or a Pseudo-<i>ojoden</i>

  • Ovidiu Matiu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/rel15020148
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 2
p. 148

Abstract

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This paper analyses Jack Kerouac’s brief but intense conversion to American pseudo-Buddhism and the artistic effect of this biographical development, arguing that his conversion was total from a spiritual point of view and that its almost immediate effect was the production of a literary piece which should be read as a (fictional) pseudo-Buddhist hagiography, or a pseudo-ojoden. The article investigates Jack Kerouac’s life as the life of a modern American Buddha, as a person engaged in a constant quest for spiritual enlightenment, who imbued his work with a spiritual feeling derived from his personal, direct, albeit limited experience with spirituality. His novel, The Dharma Bums, is a (fictional) pseudo-Buddhist hagiography because it is (auto)biographical, and the central characters are portrayed as enlightened, “holy” beings.

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