Howl (poem)

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Howl
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English

"Howl", also known as "Howl for Carl Solomon", is a poem written by Allen Ginsberg in 1954–1955 and published in his 1956 collection Howl and Other Poems. The poem is dedicated to Carl Solomon.

Ginsberg began work on "Howl" in 1954. In the Paul Blackburn Tape Archive at the University of California, San Diego, Ginsberg can be heard reading early drafts of his poem to his fellow writing associates. "Howl" is considered to be one of the great works of American literature.[1][2] It came to be associated with the group of writers known as the Beat Generation.[1]

It is not true that "Howl" was written as a

obscene literature, and both were arrested. On October 3, 1957, Judge Clayton W. Horn ruled that the poem was not obscene.[4]

Writing

According to Ginsberg's bibliographer and archivist

Sir Francis Drake Hotel in the San Francisco fog as the monstrous face of a child-eating demon. As was his wont, Ginsberg took notes on his vision, and these became the basis for Part II of the poem.[5]

In late 1954 and 1955, in an apartment he had rented at 1010 Montgomery Street in the North Beach neighborhood of San Francisco, Ginsberg worked on the poem, originally referring to it by the working title "Strophes."[6] Some drafts were purportedly written at a coffeehouse called Caffe Mediterraneum in Berkeley, California; Ginsberg had moved into a small cottage in Berkeley a few blocks from the campus of the University of California on September 1, 1955.[7] Many factors went into the creation of the poem. A short time before the composition of "Howl", Ginsberg's therapist, Dr. Philip Hicks, encouraged him to realize his desire to quit his market-research job and pursue poetry full-time and to accept his own homosexuality.[8][9][10] He experimented with a syntactic subversion of meaning called parataxis in the poem "Dream Record: June 8, 1955" about the death of Joan Vollmer, a technique that became central in "Howl".[8][11]

Ginsberg showed this poem to Kenneth Rexroth, who criticized it as too stilted and academic; Rexroth encouraged Ginsberg to free his voice and write from his heart.[12][13] Ginsberg took this advice and attempted to write a poem with no restrictions. He was under the immense influence of William Carlos Williams and Jack Kerouac and attempted to speak with his own voice spontaneously.[13][14] Ginsberg began the poem in the stepped triadic form he took from Williams but, in the middle of typing the poem, his style altered such that his own unique form (a long line based on breath organized by a fixed base) began to emerge.[8][13]

Ginsberg experimented with this breath-length form in many later poems. The first draft contained what later became Part I and Part III.[

mental institution and became friends with him.[citation needed
]

Ginsberg later stated this sympathy for Solomon was connected to bottled-up guilt and sympathy for his mother's

Howlin' At the Moon"—may have been the encouragement for the title of Ginsberg's poem. "I never asked him, and he never offered," Orlovsky told them, "but there were things he would pick up on and use in his verse form some way or another. Poets do it all the time."[citation needed] The Dedication by Ginsberg states he took the title from Kerouac.[citation needed
]

Performance and publication

The poem was first performed at the Six Gallery in San Francisco on October 7, 1955.[15] The reading was conceived by Wally Hedrick—a painter and co-founder of the Six—who approached Ginsberg in mid-1955 and asked him to organize a poetry reading at the Six Gallery. "At first, Ginsberg refused. But once he'd written a rough draft of Howl, he changed his 'fucking mind', as he put it." Further evidence that this was not performance art but poetry; a written piece that Ginsberg would not and has not ever described as anything but a poem—not a performance piece.[16]

Ginsberg was ultimately responsible for inviting the readers (Gary Snyder, Philip Lamantia, Philip Whalen, Michael McClure and Kenneth Rexroth) and writing the invitation. "Howl" was the second to the last reading (before "A Berry Feast" by Snyder) and was considered by most in attendance the highlight of the reading. Many considered it the beginning of a new movement, and the reputation of Ginsberg and those associated with the Six Gallery reading spread throughout San Francisco.[16] In response to Ginsberg's reading, McClure wrote: "Ginsberg read on to the end of the poem, which left us standing in wonder, or cheering and wondering, but knowing at the deepest level that a barrier had been broken, that a human voice and body had been hurled against the harsh wall of America...."[17]

Jack Kerouac gave a first-hand account of the Six Gallery performance (in which Ginsberg is renamed 'Alvah Goldbrook' and the poem becomes 'Wail') in Chapter 2 of his 1958 novel, The Dharma Bums:

Anyway I followed the whole gang of howling poets to the reading at Gallery Six that night, which was, among other important things, the night of the birth of the San Francisco Poetry Renaissance. Everyone was there. It was a mad night. And I was the one who got things jumping by going around collecting dimes and quarters from the rather stiff audience standing around in the gallery and coming back with three huge gallon jugs of California Burgundy and getting them all piffed so that by eleven o'clock when Alvah Goldbrook was reading his poem 'Wail' drunk with arms outspread everybody was yelling 'Go! Go! Go!' (like a jam session) and old Rheinhold Cacoethes the father of the Frisco poetry scene was wiping his tears in gladness.[18]

Soon afterwards, "Howl" was published by Lawrence Ferlinghetti, who ran City Lights Bookstore and the City Lights Press. Ginsberg completed Part II and the "Footnote" after Ferlinghetti had promised to publish the poem. It was too short to make an entire book, so Ferlinghetti requested some other poems. Thus the final collection contained several other poems written at that time; with these poems, Ginsberg continued the experimentation with long lines and a fixed base he'd discovered with the composition of "Howl" and these poems have likewise become some of Ginsberg's most famous: "America", "Sunflower Sutra", "A Supermarket in California", etc.[citation needed]

The earliest extant recording of "Howl" was thought to date from March 18, 1956. (The Blackburn Collection recordings show otherwise.) Ginsberg and Snyder, after hitch-hiking from San Francisco, read from their poems in the Anna Mann dormitory at Reed College, Snyder's alma mater. This recording, discovered in mid-2007 on a reel-to-reel tape in the Reed College archives, contains only Part I of "Howl". After beginning to read Part II, Ginsberg said to the audience, "I don't really feel like reading anymore. I just sorta haven't got any kind of steam."[19]

Overview and structure

The poem consists of 112 paragraph-like lines,[20] which are organized into three parts, with an additional footnote.

Part I

Called by Ginsberg "a lament for the Lamb in America with instances of remarkable lamb-like youths", Part I is perhaps the best known, and communicates scenes, characters, and situations drawn from Ginsberg's personal experience as well as from the community of poets, artists, political

drug addicts
, and psychiatric patients whom he had encountered in the late 1940s and early 1950s. Ginsberg refers to these people, who were underrepresented outcasts in what the poet believed to be an oppressively conformist and materialistic era, as "the best minds of my generation". He describes their experiences in graphic detail, openly discussing drug use and homosexual activity at multiple points.

Most lines in this section contain the fixed base "who". In "Notes Written on Finally Recording Howl," Ginsberg writes, "I depended on the word 'who' to keep the beat, a base to keep measure, return to and take off from again onto another streak of invention".[21]

Part II

Ginsberg says that Part II, in relation to Part I, "names the monster of mental consciousness that preys on the Lamb". Part II is about the state of industrial civilization, characterized in the poem as "

Canaanites sacrificed children.[21]

Ginsberg intends that the characters he portrays in Part I be understood to have been sacrificed to this idol. Moloch is also the name of an industrial, demonic figure in Fritz Lang's Metropolis, a film that Ginsberg credits with influencing "Howl, Part II" in his annotations for the poem (see especially Howl: Original Draft Facsimile, Transcript & Variant Versions). Most lines in this section contain the fixed base "Moloch". Ginsberg says of Part II, "Here the long line is used as a stanza form broken into exclamatory units punctuated by a base repetition, Moloch."[21]

Part III

Part III, in relation to Parts I, II and IV, is "a litany of affirmation of the Lamb in its glory", according to Ginsberg. It is directly addressed to Carl Solomon, whom Ginsberg met during a brief stay at a psychiatric hospital in 1949; called "Rockland" in the poem, it was actually Columbia Presbyterian Psychological Institute. This section is notable for its refrain, "I'm with you in Rockland", and represents something of a turning point away from the grim tone of the "Moloch"-section. Of the structure, Ginsberg says Part III is "pyramidal, with a graduated longer response to the fixed base".[21]

Footnote

The closing section of the poem is the "Footnote", characterized by its repetitive "Holy!" mantra, an ecstatic assertion that everything is holy. Ginsberg says, "I remembered the archetypal rhythm of Holy Holy Holy weeping in a bus on Kearny Street, and wrote most of it down in notebook there. ... I set it as 'Footnote to Howl' because it was an extra variation of the form of Part II."[21]

Rhythm

The frequently quoted and often parodied[22][23][24][25][26][excessive citations] opening lines set the theme and rhythm for the poem:

I saw the best minds of my generation destroyed by madness, starving hysterical naked,
dragging themselves through the negro streets at dawn looking for an angry fix,
Angel-headed hipsters burning for the ancient heavenly connection
to the starry dynamo in the machinery of night,

Ginsberg's own commentary discusses the work as an experiment with the "long line". For example, Part I is structured as a single run-on sentence with a repetitive refrain dividing it up into breaths. Ginsberg said, "Ideally each line of 'Howl' is a single breath unit. My breath is long—that's the measure, one physical-mental inspiration of thought contained in the elastic of a breath."[21]

On another occasion, he explained: "the line length ... you'll notice that they're all built on bop—you might think of them as a bop refrain—chorus after chorus after chorus—the ideal being, say, Lester Young in Kansas City in 1938, blowing 72 choruses of 'The Man I Love' until everyone in the hall was out of his head..."[19]

1957 obscenity trial

"Howl" contains many references to illicit drugs and sexual practices, both heterosexual and homosexual. Claiming that the book was obscene, customs officials seized 520 copies of the poem that were being imported from England on March 25, 1957.[27]

On June 3

California State Superior Court Judge Clayton Horn decided that the poem was of "redeeming social importance".[29][30]

The case was widely publicized, with articles appearing in both Time and Life magazines. An account of the trial was published by Ferlinghetti's lead defense attorney Jake Ehrlich in a book called Howl of the Censor. The 2010 film Howl depicts the events of the trial. James Franco stars as the young Allen Ginsberg and Andrew Rogers portrays Ferlinghetti.[31]

1969 broadcast controversy in Finland

Yleisradio
is getting ready to discuss the broadcast of “Howl” in December 1969.

Part one of "Howl" was broadcast in

jazz music specially composed for this radio broadcast by Henrik Otto Donner. The poem was preceded by an eight-minute introduction. The Finnish translation was made by Anselm Hollo.[32] The translation was published already in 1961 in Parnasso literary magazine, and caused no turmoil then.[citation needed
]

A

Finnish Parliament, Arne Berner, heard the broadcast, and started an interpellation, addressed to the Minister of Transport and Public Works. It was signed by him and 82 other members of the 200 members of parliament.[33] It is unclear how many of the other signatories actually had heard the broadcast. The interpellation text only contained a short extract of six lines (considered to be offensive, and representative of the poem) of over seventy from the poem, and the debate was mainly based upon them.[34]

Also, a report of an offence was filed to the criminal investigation department of

]

At that time, homosexual acts were still illegal in Finland.[citation needed]

Finally, the Ministry of Transport and Public Works considered in December 1969 that the broadcast of "Howl" contravened the licence of operation of Yleisradio: it was neither educational nor useful. Yleisradio received a reprimand, and was instructed to be more careful when monitoring that no more such programs should be broadcast.[36]

Biographical references and allusions

Part I

Line Reference
"who bared their brains to Heaven under the El and saw Mohammedan angels staggering on tenement roofs illuminated." This is a direct reference told to Ginsberg by Kerouac about poet Philip Lamantia's "celestial adventure" after reading the Quran.[37]
"Who passed through universities with radiant cool eyes hallucinating Arkansas and Blake—light tragedies among the scholars of war" and "who thought they were only mad when Baltimore gleamed in supernatural ecstasy" Ginsberg had an important auditory hallucination in 1948 of William Blake reading his poems "Ah, Sunflower", "The Sick Rose", and "Little Girl Lost". Ginsberg said it revealed to him the interconnectedness of all existence. He said his drug experimentation in many ways was an attempt to recapture that feeling.[38][39]
"Who were expelled from the academy for crazy & publishing obscene odes on the windows of the skull" Part of the reason Ginsberg was suspended in his sophomore year
anti-Semite because she never cleaned his window, and he expressed this feeling in explicit terms on his window, by writing "Fuck the Jews", and drawing a swastika. He also wrote a phrase on the window implying that the president of the university had no testicles.[41][42]
"who cowered in unshaven rooms in underwear, burning their money in wastebaskets and listening to the Terror through the wall" Lucien Carr burned his insanity record, along with $20, at his mother's insistence.[43]
"... poles of Canada and Paterson..." Kerouac was
French-Canadian from Lowell, Massachusetts; Ginsberg grew up in Paterson, New Jersey.[44]
"who sank all night in submarine light of Bickford's floated out and sat through the stale beer afternoons in desolate Fugazzi's..." Bickford's and Fugazzi's were New York spots where the Beats hung out. Ginsberg worked briefly at Fugazzi's.[45][46]
"... Tangerian bone-grindings ..." "... Tangiers to boys ..." and "Holy Tangiers!" William S. Burroughs lived in
Tangier, Morocco at the time Ginsberg wrote "Howl". He also experienced withdrawal from heroin, which he wrote about in several letters to Ginsberg.[47]
"who studied
St. John of the Cross telepathy and bop kabbalah because the cosmos instinctively vibrated at their feet in Kansas
"
Mystics and forms of mysticism in which Ginsberg at one time had an interest.[47]
"who disappeared into the volcanoes of Mexico". Both a reference to John Hoffman, a friend of Philip Lamantia and Carl Solomon, who died in Mexico, and a reference to Under the Volcano by Malcolm Lowry.[37]
"weeping and undressing while the sirens of Los Alamos wailed them down" A reference to a protest staged by
The Living Theater.[48]
"who bit detectives in the neck ... dragged off the roof waving genitals and manuscripts." Also, from "who ... fell out of the subway window" to "the blast of colossal steam whistles". A specific reference to Bill Cannastra, who actually did most of these things and died when he "fell out of the subway window".[48][49][50]
"Saintly motorcyclists" A reference to Marlon Brando and his biker persona in The Wild One.[47]
From "Who copulated ecstatic and insatiate" to "Who went out whoring through
Denver
is lonesome for her heroes"
A reference to Neal Cassady (N.C.) who lived in Denver, Colorado, and had a reputation for being sexually voracious, as well as stealing cars.[51][52][53]
"who walked all night with their shoes full of blood on the showbank docks waiting for a door in the East River to open to a room full of steamheat and opium" A specific reference to
Riker's Island.[52][54]
"... and rose to build harpsichords in their lofts ..." Friend Bill Keck built harpsichords. Ginsberg had a conversation with Keck's wife shortly before writing "Howl".[49][55][56]
"who coughed on the six floor of Harlem crowned with flame under the tubercular sky surrounded by orange crates of theology" This is a reference to the apartment in which Ginsberg lived when he had his Blake vision. His roommate, Russell Durgin, was a theology student and kept his books in orange crates.[55][57]
"who threw their watches off the roof to cast their ballot with eternity outside of time ..." A reference to Ginsberg's Columbia classmate Louis Simpson, an incident that happened during a brief stay in a mental institution for post-traumatic stress disorder.[52][55]
"who were burned alive in their innocent flannel suits on
nitroglycerine
shrieks of the fairies of advertising"
Ginsberg worked as a market researcher for Towne-Oller Associates in San Francisco, on Montgomery Street, not Madison Avenue.[58]
"who jumped off the Brooklyn Bridge ..." A specific reference to Tuli Kupferberg.[48][59]
"who crashed through their minds in jail ..." A reference to Jean Genet's Le Condamné à mort.[48]
"who retired to Mexico to cultivate a habit, or Rocky Mount to tender
Harvard to Narcissus
to Woodlawn to the daisychain or grave"
Many of the Beats went to Mexico City to "cultivate" a drug "habit", but Ginsberg claims this is a direct reference to Burroughs and Bill Garver, though Burroughs lived in Tangiers at the time
Woodlawn Cemetery.[53][55]
"Accusing the radio of hypnotism ..." A reference to Ginsberg's mother Naomi, who suffered from
paranoid schizophrenia. It also refers to Antonin Artaud's reaction to shock therapy and his "To Have Done with the Judgement of God", which Solomon introduced to Ginsberg at Columbia Presbyterian Psychological Institute.[63][64]
From "who threw potato salad at CCNY lecturers on
Dadaism ..." to "resting briefly in catatonia
"
A specific reference to Carl Solomon. Initially this final section went straight into what is now Part III, which is entirely about Carl Solomon. An art movement emphasizing nonsense and irrationality. In the poem, it is the subject of a lecture that is interrupted by students throwing potato salad at the professors. This ironically mirrored the playfulness of the movement but in a darker context. A Post WW1 cultural movement, Dada stood for 'anti-art', it was against everything that art stood for. Founded in Zurich, Switzerland. The meaning of the word means two different definitions; "hobby horse" and "father", chosen randomly. The Dada movement spread rapidly.[65][66][67]
"Pilgrim's State's Rockland's and Greystone's foetid halls ..." and "I'm with you in Rockland" These are mental institutions associated with either Ginsberg's mother Naomi or Carl Solomon: Pilgrim State Hospital and Rockland State Hospital in New York and Greystone Park State Hospital in New Jersey. Ginsberg met Solomon at Columbia Presbyterian Psychological Institute, but "Rockland" was frequently substituted for "rhythmic euphony".[63][64][68]
"with mother finally ******" Ginsberg admitted that the deletion here was an expletive. He left it purposefully elliptical "to introduce appropriate element of uncertainty". In later readings, many years after he was able to distance himself from his difficult history with his mother, he reinserted the word "fucked".[65]
"obsessed with a sudden flash of the alchemy of the use of the ellipse the catalog the meter (alt: variable measure) & the vibrating plane". Also, from "who dreamt and made incarnate gaps in Time & Space" to "what might be left to say in time come after death". This is a recounting of Ginsberg's discovery of his own style and the debt he owed to his strongest influences. He discovered the use of the ellipse from haiku and the shorter poetry of Ezra Pound and William Carlos Williams. "The catalog" is a reference to Walt Whitman's long line style which Ginsberg adapted. "The meter"/"variable measure" is a reference to Williams' insistence on the necessity of measure. Though "Howl" may seem formless, Ginsberg claimed it was written in a concept of measure adapted from Williams' idea of breath, the measure of lines in a poem being based on the breath in reading. Ginsberg's breath in reading, he said, happened to be longer than Williams'. "The vibrating plane" is a reference to Ginsberg's discovery of the "eyeball kick" in his study of Cézanne.[69][70][71]
"Pater Omnipotens Aeterna Deus"/"omnipotent, eternal father God" This was taken directly from
Cézanne.[63][72]
"to recreate the measure and syntax of poor human prose ..." A reference to the tremendous influence Kerouac and his ideas of "Spontaneous Prose" had on Ginsberg's work and specifically this poem.[73][74]
"what might be left to say in time come after death" A reference to Louis Zukofsky's translation of Catullus: "What might be left to say anew in time after death ..." Also a reference to a section from the final pages of Visions of Cody, "I'm writing this book because we're all going to die", and so on.[63]
"eli eli lama sabachthani" One of the
agnostic household, he was very interested in his Jewish roots and in other concepts of spiritual transcendence. Although later Ginsberg was a devoted Buddhist, at this time he was only beginning to study Buddhism along with other forms of spirituality.[55]

Part II

Line Reference
"Moloch! Solitude! Filth! Ugliness!" Fire god of the Canaanites referred to in Leviticus 18:21: "And thou shalt not let any of thy seed pass through the fire to Molech." Worship of Moloch involved the sacrifice of children by fire.[56][75]
"Moloch whose buildings are judgement!" A reference to
Zoas.[75]
"Crossbone soulless jailhouse and congress of sorrows ..." and "Holy the solitudes of skyscrapers and pavements! Holy the cafeterias filled with the millions!" A reference to Gods' Man, a graphic novel by Lynd Ward which was in Ginsberg’s childhood library.[76]
From "Moloch whose breast is a cannibal dynamo!" to "Moloch whose skyscrapers stand in the long streets like endless Jehovahs!" A reference to several films by Fritz Lang, most notably Metropolis in which the name "Moloch" is directly related to a monstrous factory. Ginsberg also claimed he was inspired by Lang's M and The Testament of Dr. Mabuse.[77]
"Moloch whose eyes are a thousand blind windows!" Ginsberg claimed Part II of "Howl" was inspired by a peyote-induced vision of the Sir Francis Drake Hotel in San Francisco which appeared to him as a monstrous face.[49][77][78]
From "Moloch whose soul is electricity and banks!" to "Moloch whose name is the Mind!" A reference to Ezra Pound's idea of usury as related in the Cantos and ideas from Blake, specifically the "Mind forg'd manacles" from "London". Ginsberg claimed "Moloch whose name is the Mind!" is "a crux of the poem".[79]
"Lifting the city to Heaven which exists and is everywhere about us" A reference to "Morning" from Season in Hell by Arthur Rimbaud.[79]

Part III

Line Reference
"I'm with you in Rockland/where we are great writers on the same dreadful typewriter ..." At Columbia Presbyterian Psychological Institute, Ginsberg and Solomon wrote satirical letters to Malcolm de Chazal and T. S. Eliot which they did not ultimately send.[80][81]
"I'm with you in Rockland/where you drink the tea of the breasts of the spinsters of Utica." A reference to Mamelles de Tiresias by Guillaume Apollinaire.[82]
From "I'm with you in Rockland/where you scream in a straightjacket" to "fifty more shocks will never return your soul to its body again ..." Solomon received shock treatment and was put in a straightjacket at Pilgrim State.[82]
"I'm with you in Rockland/where you bang on a catatonic piano ..." Ginsberg was the one reprimanded for banging on a piano at CPPI.[83][84]
"I'm with you in Rockland/where you split the heavens of Long Island ..." Pilgrim State is located on Long Island.[83]
"I'm with you in Rockland/where there are twenty five thousand mad comrades all together singing the final stanzas of the Internationale ..." The population of Pilgrim State was 25,000. "The Internationale" was a song used and made popular by worker movements, and was featured in the Little Red Songbook of the Industrial Workers of the World.[83]
"... the door of my cottage in the Western night." A reference to the cottage on Milvia Street in Berkeley, California, where many of the poems in Howl and Other Poems were composed, including "A Strange New Cottage in Berkeley".[83]

Footnote to "Howl"

Line Reference
"Everyday is in eternity!" A reference to "Auguries of Innocence" by Blake: "Hold Infinity in the palm of your hand/And Eternity in an hour.” [85]
"Holy Peter holy Allen holy Solomon holy Lucien holy Kerouac holy Huncke holy Burroughs holy Cassady ..." Peter Orlovsky, Allen Ginsberg, Carl Solomon, Lucien Carr, Jack Kerouac, Herbert Huncke, William S. Burroughs, and Neal Cassady.[85]
"Holy the Fifth International" A reference to four "Internationals", meetings of
Trotskyists in 1938. The Fifth International, Ginsberg would claim, is yet to come.[85]

Critical reception

Beat generation.[86]

On October 7, 2005, celebrations marking the 50th anniversary of the first reading of the poem were staged in San Francisco, New York City, and in

) reflecting on the piece's enduring influence.

1997 broadcasting controversy

Safe Harbor laws which allow for mature content later at night.[87][88]

2007 broadcasting fears

In late August 2007, Ron Collins, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Nancy Peters, Bill Morgan, Peter Hale, David Skover,

Pacifica Radio to air Ginsberg's Howl on October 3, 2007, to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the verdict declaring the poem to be protected under the First Amendment against charges of obscenity. Fearing fines from the FCC, Pacifica New York radio station WBAI opted not to broadcast the poem. The station chose instead to play the poem on a special webcast program, replete with commentary (by Bob Holman, Regina Weinreich and Ron Collins, narrated by Janet Coleman), on October 3, 2007.[89]

Legacy

Part II of the poem was used as libretto for Song #7 in Hydrogen Jukebox, a 1990 chamber opera using a selection of Ginsberg's poems set to music by Philip Glass.[90] The first line of the poem, "I saw the best minds of my generation destroyed by madness, starving hysterical ..." was also used as the opening line in the song "I Should Be Allowed To Think" by They Might Be Giants.

Film

The 2010 film Howl explored Ginsberg's life and works. Constructed in a

early life of Ginsberg during the 1940s and 1950s. It also re-enacts Ginsberg's debut performance of "Howl" at the Six Gallery Reading on October 7, 1955, in black-and-white.[91]
Parts of the poem are interpreted through animated sequences, and the events are juxtaposed with color images of Ferlinghetti's 1957 obscenity trial.

References

  1. ^ a b Bill Savage (2008). Allen Ginsberg's "Howl" and the Paperback Revolution Archived 2011-09-05 at the Wayback Machine. Poets.org, Academy of American Poets.
  2. ^ Jonah Raski (2006). American Scream: Allen Ginsberg's Howl and the Making of the Beat Generation. University of California Press. 223.
  3. ^ Howl was published in the Evergreen Review, Volume 1, No. 2 (1957).
  4. ^ Morgan, Bill and Joyce Peters. Howl on Trial.(2006) p. xiii.
  5. ^ Bill Morgan, The Typewriter Is Holy: Complete, Uncensored History of the Beat Generation (New York: Free Press, 2010), pp. 86–87. In the introduction Morgan says: "[F]or the last two decades of Allen Ginsberg's life, I assisted him daily as his bibliographer and archivist. During that period, I managed to track down nearly everything that he had ever published and a good deal of what had been printed about him. It was a mammoth task. Every day, as I walked to the apartment that served both as Allen's home and office, I wondered what new treasures I'd uncover. . . . After I sold his archive to Stanford University for a million dollars, Allen referred everyone with questions about their papers to me" (p. xvi).
  6. ^ Morgan, The Typewriter Is Holy (2010), pp. 92 & 96.
  7. ^ Morgan, The Typewriter Is Holy (2010), p. 97.
  8. ^ a b c Allen Ginsberg. Journals Mid-Fifties: 1954–1958. Ed. Gordon Ball. HarperCollins, 1995. 0060167718.
  9. ^ James Breslin. "Allen Ginsberg: The Origins of Howl and Kaddish." Poetry Criticism. Ed. David M. Galens. Vol. 47. Detroit: Gale, 2003.
  10. ^ Morgan, The Typewriter Is Holy (2010), p. 92
  11. , pg. 182
  12. ^ Journals Mid-Fifties, pg.9
  13. ^ a b c Miles, pg. 183
  14. ^ Journals Mid-Fifties, pg. 167
  15. ^ Heidi Benson, "Howl", San Francisco Chronicle", October 4, 2005
  16. ^ a b Jonah Raskin, American Scream: Allen Ginsberg's "Howl" and the Making of the Beat Generation
  17. ^ Poets.org, From the Academy of American Poets: Allen Ginsberg
  18. .
  19. ^ a b Jeff Baker, "'Howl' tape gives Reed claim to first", The Oregonian, 2008-02-12
  20. .
  21. ^ a b c d e f Ginsberg, Allen. "Notes Written on Finally Recording 'Howl.'" Deliberate Prose: Selected Essays 1952–1995. Ed. Bill Morgan. New York: Harper Collins, 2000.
  22. ^ "'Howl' at the Internet".
  23. ^ Scoville, Thomas. "Howl.com".
  24. – via Google Books.
  25. ^ Colagrande, J. J. (19 February 2014). ""PROWL", a Parody on Miami's Transience and Eccentricities - Huffington Post". HuffPost.
  26. ^ Felber, Katie (25 August 2014). "I Re-Wrote Ginsberg's 'Howl' for This Generation – Huffington Post". HuffPost.
  27. ^ Miles, Barry (March 18, 2019). "The Beat Goes On A century of Lawrence Ferlinghetti". Poetry Foundation. Retrieved December 2, 2019.
  28. .
  29. ^ How "Howl" Changed the World, Allen Ginsberg's anguished protest broke all the rules—and encouraged a generation of artists to do the same. By Fred Kaplan, Slate, Sept. 24, 2010
  30. .
  31. ^ Scott, A. O. (September 23, 2010). "Howl (2010)". The New York Times.
  32. ^ Lounela, Pekka & Mäntylä, Jyrki: Huuto ja meteli, p. 16. [Howl and turmoil.] Hämeenlinna, Karisto. 1970. (In Finnish.)
  33. ^ Lounela & Mäntylä, p. 17.
  34. ^ Lounela & Mäntylä, p. 102.
  35. ^ Lounale & Mäntylä, pp. 39–41.
  36. ^ Lounela & Mäntylä, pp. 5, 78–79.
  37. ^ . p. 124.
  38. ^ Original Draft, pp. 125, 128
  39. , p. 6.
  40. ^ Lib.unc.edu
  41. ^ Original Draft, p. 132
  42. ^ Miles, p. 57
  43. . p. 58.
  44. ^ Miles, p. 1
  45. ^ Original Draft, p. 125
  46. ^ Raskin, p. 134
  47. ^ a b c Original Draft, p. 126
  48. ^ a b c d Original Draft, p. 128
  49. ^ a b c Miles, p. 189
  50. , p. 128.
  51. ^ Original Draft, p. 126-127
  52. ^ a b c Miles, p. 186
  53. ^ a b Raskin, p. 137
  54. ^ Original Draft, p. 133
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Further reading

External links