Spontaneous mind : selected interviews, 1958-1996 / Allen Ginsberg ; with a preface by Václav Havel and an introduction by Edmund White ; edited by David Carter.
2001
PS3513.I74 Z476 2001
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Details
Title
Spontaneous mind : selected interviews, 1958-1996 / Allen Ginsberg ; with a preface by Václav Havel and an introduction by Edmund White ; edited by David Carter.
Edition
1st ed.
ISBN
0060192933
9780060192938
9780060192938
Imprint
New York : HarperCollins, c2001.
Language
English
Description
xix, 601 p. ; 24 cm.
Call Number
PS3513.I74 Z476 2001
System Control No.
(OCoLC)44427264
Summary
"The interviews collected in Spontaneous Mind, chronologically arranged and in some cases previously unpublished, were conducted throughout Allen Ginsberg's long career. Always a candid and engaging subject, Ginsberg considered the interview an art form, as well as an opportunity to get his message across to many people, which, as a student of Eastern religions, he believed was his spiritual obligation. In these interviews, dating from the late 1950s to the mid-1990s, Ginsberg speaks frankly about his life, his work, and the events of his time." "Ginsberg's progressive and controversial views on politics and censorship dominate his interviews, from his conversation with the conservative William F. Buckley on PBS to his comments in the Dartmouth Review about U.S. policy in Central America to his testimony at the Chicago Seven trial. Ginsberg discusses his literary influences, including Ezra Pound, William Carlos Williams, Walt Whitman, and William Blake, and offers insights into his own poetry, particularly his innovations in rhythm, meter, and syllable emphasis. A well-known experimenter with drugs, campaigner for their legalization, and believer in their ability to expand consciousness, Ginsberg here describes his LSD trips and his marijuana highs, and explains how they influenced the creation of "Kaddish" and other works. And he talks about his personal life with candor, revealing details of his sexual affairs with fellow Beats Jack Kerouac, William Burroughs, and Neal Cassady, and his longtime relationship with Peter Orlovsky."--BOOK JACKET.
Review
"The interviews collected in Spontaneous Mind, chronologically arranged and in some cases previously unpublished, were conducted throughout Allen Ginsberg's long career. Always a candid and engaging subject, Ginsberg considered the interview an art form, as well as an opportunity to get his message across to many people, which, as a student of Eastern religions, he believed was his spiritual obligation. In these interviews, dating from the late 1950s to the mid-1990s, Ginsberg speaks frankly about his life, his work, and the events of his time." "Ginsberg's progressive and controversial views on politics and censorship dominate his interviews, from his conversation with the conservative William F. Buckley on PBS to his comments in the Dartmouth Review about U.S. policy in Central America to his testimony at the Chicago Seven trial. Ginsberg discusses his literary influences, including Ezra Pound, William Carlos Williams, Walt Whitman, and William Blake, and offers insights into his own poetry, particularly his innovations in rhythm, meter, and syllable emphasis. A well-known experimenter with drugs, campaigner for their legalization, and believer in their ability to expand consciousness, Ginsberg here describes his LSD trips and his marijuana highs, and explains how they influenced the creation of "Kaddish" and other works. And he talks about his personal life with candor, revealing details of his sexual affairs with fellow Beats Jack Kerouac, William Burroughs, and Neal Cassady, and his longtime relationship with Peter Orlovsky."--BOOK JACKET.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 583-595) and index.
Formatted Contents Note
Marc D. Schleifer, Village Voice
Ernie Barry, City Lights Journal
Tom Clark, The Paris Review
Barry Farrell
Bob Elliott, Freelance
William F. Buckley, Jr., Firing Line
Fernanda Pivano
Michael Aldrich, Edward Kissam, and Nancy Blecker, "Improvised Poetics"
Paul Carroll, Playboy
Bill Prescott, (untitled)
Chicago Seven Trial Testimony
Mary Jane Fortunato, Lucille Medwick, and Susan Rowe, New York Quarterly
Alison Colbert, Partisan Review
Yves Le Pellec, "The New Consciousness"
Allen Young, Gay Sunshine Interview
John Durham, "The Death of Ezra Pound"
Ekbert Faas, from Towards a New American Poetics
Michael Goodwin, Richard Hyatt, and Ed Ward, "Squawks Mid-Afternoon"
Peter Barry Chowka, New Age Journal
Paul Portugese and Guy Amirthanayagam, "Buddhist Meditation and Poetic Spontaneity"
Nancy Bunge, from Finding the Words
Helen, Flipside Fanzine
Michael Schumacher, Oui
Steve Foehr
Simon Albury
John Lofton, Chronicles
Josef Jarab
Thomas Gladysz, Photo Metro
Clint Frakes
Steve Silberman, www.HotWired.com.
Ernie Barry, City Lights Journal
Tom Clark, The Paris Review
Barry Farrell
Bob Elliott, Freelance
William F. Buckley, Jr., Firing Line
Fernanda Pivano
Michael Aldrich, Edward Kissam, and Nancy Blecker, "Improvised Poetics"
Paul Carroll, Playboy
Bill Prescott, (untitled)
Chicago Seven Trial Testimony
Mary Jane Fortunato, Lucille Medwick, and Susan Rowe, New York Quarterly
Alison Colbert, Partisan Review
Yves Le Pellec, "The New Consciousness"
Allen Young, Gay Sunshine Interview
John Durham, "The Death of Ezra Pound"
Ekbert Faas, from Towards a New American Poetics
Michael Goodwin, Richard Hyatt, and Ed Ward, "Squawks Mid-Afternoon"
Peter Barry Chowka, New Age Journal
Paul Portugese and Guy Amirthanayagam, "Buddhist Meditation and Poetic Spontaneity"
Nancy Bunge, from Finding the Words
Helen, Flipside Fanzine
Michael Schumacher, Oui
Steve Foehr
Simon Albury
John Lofton, Chronicles
Josef Jarab
Thomas Gladysz, Photo Metro
Clint Frakes
Steve Silberman, www.HotWired.com.
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