Madness And Insanity In Allen Ginsberg's Howl

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Life in today’s society can cause many to question themselves and their beliefs. This feeling was all too familiar for Allen Ginsberg who experienced the frustration of not being allowed by modernity to live outside the rules and regulations that it prescribed. Ginsberg’s “Howl” is a protest against social, political and sexual conformity. Through this poem he is fighting for the “best minds” who were driven to insanity or suicide by both their inability to live in the modern world and their inability to escape it. His brazen account of the world portrays how extremely dystopian the conditions of our world have become. Ginsberg juxtaposes sanity and insanity through the description of the madness that befallen “the best minds of his generation”, …show more content…

Ginsberg provides a horrific description of people “returning years later truly bald except for a wig of blood, and tears and fingers…” (Ginsberg 69). They have been stripped down of all humanity, an empty shell of their former being. Moreover, the leaders of society do not even give a moment's notice to the needs of these members of the community and pump them full of drugs to shatter their reality. For example, “and who were given instead the concrete void of insulin Metrazol electricity hydrotherapy psychotherapy occupational therapy pingpong & amnesia” (Ginsberg 67), they are not even treated with the slightest bit of respect or regards for them as people. These treatments led to the destruction of many, none of which could ever return to their original state and end up breaking “down crying in white gymnasiums naked and trembling before the machinery of other skeletons…” (Ginsberg 33). There is no more hope for them.This very thing is what Ronald Reagan worried about during the debate over state censorship during the Cold War. In which it “mentally conditioned to [the point which] somebody can tell them . . . what they can read and what they can hear . . . and what they can say and what they can think. If that day comes” (Black 34). That day has

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