The beat movement set the Post World War II scene for counter culture among mostly White writers, students, artists and musicians in the United States. it was also the beginning of what we will discuss later as Mind expansion. Study their Biographies and Match their names to the work they published. here is the link to the Bio if you need it:

Respuesta :

Answer: I could not find the link, however I can help you by listing the representative authors of the movement and their most important works.

The representative authors of the movement were: William Burroughs, Neal Cassady,  Gregory Corso, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Allen Ginsberg, Jack Kerouac and Gary Snider.

Explanation:

  • Gary Snider wrote  "A Berry Feast", which is a poem in four sections that explores the summer imagery of the fecund natural word where animal and human boundaries blur.
  • Gregory Corso most important piece was the poem "BOMB ". It was originally published by City Light Books in 1958. The poem was Corso's ironic attempt to mitigate the destruction of an atomic war by protraying the bomb-drop as a Christ like second coming.
  • Lawrence Ferlinghetti gave his contribution to the movement with his most well received works which is "A Coney Island of Mind", from 1958.
  • William Burroughs, was one of the most ferocious writers of the movement. Great part of his materials could not be published, because they were considered too obscene. However, in 1959 his most famous book, "The Naked Lunch", was pusblished in Paris.
  • Neal Cassidy, his major contribution to the Beat Moviment was his personality, even though he never produced a single book while the Movement was on fire. Thanks to his relationship with Kerouac he became one of the most influential instigators of the Beat Generation.
  • Allen Ginsberg had his big break, when he joined other Beat Poets for Republic in San Francisco, 1955. He became really popular and famous after reading in public the poem "Howl". This poem clearly is his most important work.
  • Jack Kerouac was the most significant writer of the Beat moviment. The book that established the previous statement was "On the Road", published in 1957 and it was immediate success. He was the one who came up with the term "beat" to reflect the world weary attitudes of the post World War II generation.