ENDNOTES
INTRODUCTION. A SCHOOL OF VISION
1. Nicholls, Modernism, 30.
2. Williams, The Crawdaddy Book.
CHAPTER 1. AN EXPERIENCE OF POWER
1. Lewis, Ecstatic Religion, 104.
2. Ehrenreich, Dancing in the Streets, 171.
3. Murphy, Working the Spirit.
4. Hurston, The Sanctified Church, 105–15.
5. Gilkes, quoted in Sanders, Saints in Exile, 3.
6. Castellini, “Sit In, Stand Up and Sing Out!”
7. Ibid.
8. Ibid.
9. Ibid.
CHAPTER 2. THE ISLE IS FULL OF NOISES
1. Mailer, “The White Negro,” 337–58.
2. Leary, The Politics of Ecstasy, 104.
3. MacDonald, Revolution in the Head.
CHAPTER 3. THE WESTERN RIM
1. Hine, California’s Utopian Colonies, 16.
2. Ibid.
CHAPTER 4.THE CHIMES OF FREEDOM
1. De Lillo, Libra.
2. Versluis, The Esoteric Origins of the American Renaissance.
3. Schmidt, Restless Souls.
4. Ibid.
5. Moist, “Collecting Collage, and Alchemy,” 111–27.
6. Hentoff, “Playboy Interview: Bob Dylan.”
CHAPTER 5. THE VISION OF THE BELOVED
1. MacDonald, Revolution in the Head.
2. Lewis, The Allegory of Love.
3. Corbin, Alone with the Alone, 151.
4. Mailer, An American Dream, 108.
5. Bernart de Ventadorn, quoted in Kehew, Lark in the Morning.
6. Anderson, Dante the Maker.
CHAPTER 6. EARTHQUAKE COUNTRY
1. Lewis, “The Weight of Glory.”
2. Dodd, David G. The Complete Annotated Grateful Dead Lyrics.
3. Ginsburg, “Howl,” www.poetryfoundation.org/poems-and-poets/poems/detail/49303 (accessed April 17, 2017).
CHAPTER 7. SAVING ENGLAND
1. MacDonald, Revolution in the Head.
2. www.legacy.com/news/explore-history/article/beatles-memory.
3. Tillekens, “The Semantic Shifts of the Beatles’ Chords,” www.icce.rug.nl/~soundscapes/VOLUME03/Words_and_chords.shtml.
4. Campbell, Creative Mythology.
5. Crawford, “Viktor Shklovskij: Différance in Defamiliarization,” 209–19.
6. Coleridge, The Works of Samuel Coleridge, 253.
7. www.thenation.com/article/day-life-sgt-pepper-turns-40/ (accessed April 18, 2017).
8. Leary, The Politics of Ecstasy.
CHAPTER 8. MY NAME IS CALLED DISTURBANCE
1. Bakhtin, quoted in Robinson, “Bakhtin: Carnival against Capital, Carnival against Power,” September 9, 2011. Ceasefiremagazine.co.uk (accessed April 18, 2017).
2. Hill, The World Turned Upside Down.
3. Paglia, Sexual Personae.
4. Richards, Life.
CHAPTER 9.THE SORROWFUL MYSTERIES
1. Marcus, Mystery Train.
2. Lewis, Surprised by Joy.
3. “Cyprus Avenue Birthday Gig for Van Morrison,” Irish Examiner, February 6, 2015.
4. Paglia, Sexual Personae.
CHAPTER 10.THE PROVERBS OF HELL
1. Lewis, That Hideous Strength.
2. Frye, Anatomy of Criticism.
3. Grow, “The Velvet Underground on the Most Profound Album: ‘Lou Reed Was a Force of Nature.’”
4. Lewis, Surprised by Joy.
5. Stein, Jung on Christianity.
6. Willis, Out of the Vinyl Deeps.
CHAPTER 11.THE VISION OF CHILDHOOD
1. Across the Airwaves: BBC Radio Recordings 1969–1974.
CHAPTER 12. AN EXPERIENCE OF POWER
1. Sinclair, liner notes for Kick Out the Jams.
2. Mailer, quoted in Waksman, Instruments of Desire, 208.
3. Ibid.
4. Kramer, “Can’t Forget the Motor City,” 43.
AFTERWORD
1. Frye, The Great Code.
2. Letter to his brothers, George and Thomas, on December 21, 1817.