Howl and Other Poems: Difference between revisions
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|location=San Fransisco, California, USA | |location=San Fransisco, California, USA | ||
|description_of_content=Allen Ginsberg's "beat" poetry in ''Howl and Other Poems'' sought to express unflinchingly the experience of his own consciousness. He wrote about his mentally disturbed mother, his drug use, his homosexual experiences, the deaths of drug-addicted friends, and his alienation from the Jewish faith and culture. | |description_of_content=Allen Ginsberg's "beat" poetry in ''Howl and Other Poems'' sought to express unflinchingly the experience of his own consciousness. He wrote about his mentally disturbed mother, his drug use, his homosexual experiences, the deaths of drug-addicted friends, and his alienation from the Jewish faith and culture. | ||
|description_of_incident=In 1957 The United States Custom Bureau seized 500 copies of Ginsberg's book ''Howl and Other Poems'' as they were being returned to the publisher, City Lights, in San Fransisco from the printers in London. The owner of City Lights, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, informed the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) whose lawyers told the US Attorney in San Fransisco that they were going to fight the obscenity charge being brought against the book. The books were then released. A few months later two police officers working on orders from the San Fransisco police department bought a copy of the book from City Lights and then issued an arrest warrant for Ferlinghetti for publishing obscene material. The ACLU again came to his defense and the judge acquitted Ferlinghetti, dismissing the use of the word obscene to describe ''Howl'' because the book had "redeeming social importance". In 1959 The Chicago Review published some of Ginsberg's poems. The Review's sponsors then said the journal must withdraw material from other beat writers set to appear in their next issue. The editors resigned and with Ginsberg's help they were able to put out the repressed issue under a new name. By 1965 Ginsberg had gained international notoriety for his drug use and homosexuality | |description_of_incident=In 1957 The United States Custom Bureau seized 500 copies of Ginsberg's book ''Howl and Other Poems'' as they were being returned to the publisher, City Lights, in San Fransisco from the printers in London. The owner of City Lights, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, informed the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) whose lawyers told the US Attorney in San Fransisco that they were going to fight the obscenity charge being brought against the book. The books were then released. A few months later two police officers working on orders from the San Fransisco police department bought a copy of the book from City Lights and then issued an arrest warrant for Ferlinghetti for publishing obscene material. The ACLU again came to his defense and the judge acquitted Ferlinghetti, dismissing the use of the word obscene to describe ''Howl'' because the book had "redeeming social importance". | ||
In 1959 The Chicago Review published some of Ginsberg's poems. The Review's sponsors then said the journal must withdraw material from other beat writers set to appear in their next issue. The editors resigned and with Ginsberg's help they were able to put out the repressed issue under a new name. | |||
By 1965 Ginsberg had gained international notoriety for his drug use and homosexuality. While traveling abroad he found his visa terminated in Czechoslovakia and India for his "immoral" writing. | |||
In 1984 Ginsberg found himself among a list of blacklisted speakers held by the US Information Agency as a public figure banned from government sponsored speaking engagements because of his liberal views. | |||
In 1988 Ginsberg again had to defend ''Howl'' from the censors when the Federal Communications Commissions prohibited the reading of the poem on the radio before midnight. | |||
In 2007, on the 50th anniversary of the the court ruling that said Allen Ginsberg's poem ''Howl'' was not obscene, the public radio station WBAI in New York wanted to mark the occasion by reading the work over the air. Yet fears of an FCC fine forced the station to run its reading online instead of by radio broadcast. | |||
|description_of_result=Ginsberg was always an outspoken critic of censorship. He was a member of PEN America Freedom-to-Write Committee and eventually became vice-president. | |description_of_result=Ginsberg was always an outspoken critic of censorship. He was a member of PEN America Freedom-to-Write Committee and eventually became vice-president. | ||
|image=Screen Shot 2023-07-24 at 4.39.17 PM.png | |image=Screen Shot 2023-07-24 at 4.39.17 PM.png |
Latest revision as of 14:45, 31 July 2023
Artist: Allen Ginsberg
Year: 1957
Date of Action: 1957-2007
Region: North America
Location: San Fransisco, California, USA
Subject: Explicit Sexuality, Political/Economic/Social Opinion
Medium: Literature
Confronting Bodies: U.S. Customs Bureau, City Of San Francisco, University of Chicago, Federal Communications Commission
Description of Artwork: Allen Ginsberg's "beat" poetry in Howl and Other Poems sought to express unflinchingly the experience of his own consciousness. He wrote about his mentally disturbed mother, his drug use, his homosexual experiences, the deaths of drug-addicted friends, and his alienation from the Jewish faith and culture.
The Incident: In 1957 The United States Custom Bureau seized 500 copies of Ginsberg's book Howl and Other Poems as they were being returned to the publisher, City Lights, in San Fransisco from the printers in London. The owner of City Lights, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, informed the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) whose lawyers told the US Attorney in San Fransisco that they were going to fight the obscenity charge being brought against the book. The books were then released. A few months later two police officers working on orders from the San Fransisco police department bought a copy of the book from City Lights and then issued an arrest warrant for Ferlinghetti for publishing obscene material. The ACLU again came to his defense and the judge acquitted Ferlinghetti, dismissing the use of the word obscene to describe Howl because the book had "redeeming social importance".
In 1959 The Chicago Review published some of Ginsberg's poems. The Review's sponsors then said the journal must withdraw material from other beat writers set to appear in their next issue. The editors resigned and with Ginsberg's help they were able to put out the repressed issue under a new name.
By 1965 Ginsberg had gained international notoriety for his drug use and homosexuality. While traveling abroad he found his visa terminated in Czechoslovakia and India for his "immoral" writing.
In 1984 Ginsberg found himself among a list of blacklisted speakers held by the US Information Agency as a public figure banned from government sponsored speaking engagements because of his liberal views.
In 1988 Ginsberg again had to defend Howl from the censors when the Federal Communications Commissions prohibited the reading of the poem on the radio before midnight.
In 2007, on the 50th anniversary of the the court ruling that said Allen Ginsberg's poem Howl was not obscene, the public radio station WBAI in New York wanted to mark the occasion by reading the work over the air. Yet fears of an FCC fine forced the station to run its reading online instead of by radio broadcast.
Results of Incident: Ginsberg was always an outspoken critic of censorship. He was a member of PEN America Freedom-to-Write Committee and eventually became vice-president.
Source:
• Censorship: A World Encyclopedia
• https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=15067643