The Culture of Spontaneity
Improvisation and the Arts in Postwar America
351 pages, 8 color plates, 30 halftones 6 x 9
©
1998
Cloth $31.00
ISBN: 9780226041889
Published June 1998
Paper $21.00
ISBN: 9780226041902
Published October 1999
The Culture of Spontaneity is the first comprehensive history of the postwar avant-garde, integrating such diverse moments in American culture as abstract expressionism, bebop jazz, gestalt therapy, Black Mountain College, Jungian psychology, beat poetry, experimental dance, Zen Buddhism, Alfred North Whitehead's cosmology, and the antinuclear movement. Daniel Belgrad shows how a startling variety of artistic movements actually had one unifying theme: spontaneous improvisation.
"A compelling narrative, putting living flesh on shorthand intuitions that connect North Beach to Black Mountain College, Fenollosa to Pollock, Jackson Lears's No Place of Grace to Todd Gitlin's The Sixties."—Joel Smith, Boston Review
"An invaluable introduction to postwar modernism across the arts."—Thomas Augst, Boston Book Review
"Belgrad's extensive probing of the artists and movements with their profound sociological roots is timely as well as comprehensive....A major contribution for serious scholars."—Choice
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