’s Life Essay, Research Paper
Ann Charters
Ginsberg, Allen (3 June 1926-6 Apr. 1997), poet, was born in Newark, New Jersey, the
younger son of Louis Ginsberg, a high school English teacher and poet, and Naomi Levy
Ginsberg. Ginsberg grew up with his older brother Eugene in a household shadowed by his
mother’s mental illness; she suffered from recurrent epileptic seizures and paranoia. An
active member of the Communist Party-USA, Naomi Ginsberg took her sons to meetings of the
radical left dedicated to the cause of international Communism during the Great Depression
of the 1930s.
In the winter of 1941, when Allen was a junior in high school, his mother insisted that
he take her to a therapist at a Lakewood,
New Jersey, rest home, a disruptive bus journey he described in his long autobiographical
poem "Kaddish." Naomi Ginsberg spent most of the next fifteen years in mental
hospitals, enduring the effects of electroshock treatments and a lobotomy before
her death at Pilgrim State Hospital in 1956. Witnessing his mother’s mental illness had a
traumatic effect on Ginsberg, who wrote poetry about her unstable condition for the rest
of his life.
Graduating from Newark’s East Side High School in 1943, Ginsberg later recalled that
his most memorable school day was the afternoon his English teacher Frances Durbin read
aloud from Walt Whitman’s "Song of Myself" in a voice "so enthusiastic and
joyous . . . so confident and lifted with laughter" that he never forgot the image of
"her black-dressed bulk seated squat behind an English class desk, her embroidered
collar, her voice powerful and high" (quoted in Schumacher, p. 17). Despite his
passionate response to Whitman’s poetry, Ginsberg listed government or legal work as his
choice of future occupation in the high school yearbook.
Attending the college of Columbia University on a scholarship, Ginsberg considered his
favorite course the required freshman
great books seminar taught by Lionel Trilling. Later Ginsberg also cited the renowned
literary critics and biographers Mark
Van Doren and Raymond Weaver as influential professors at Columbia. But Ginsberg’s friends
at Columbia were an even greater influence than his professors on his decision to become a
poet. As a freshman he met undergraduate Lucien Carr, who introduced him to William S.
Burroughs and Jack Kerouac, part of a diverse (and now legendary) circle of friends that
grew to include the Times Square heroin addict Herbert Huncke, the young novelist John
Clellon Holmes, and a handsome young drifter and car thief from Denver named Neal Cassady,
with whom Ginsberg fell in love. Kerouac described the intense encounter between Ginsberg
and Cassady in the opening chapter of his novel On the Road (1957).
These friends became the nucleus of a group that named themselves the "Beat
Generation" writers. The term was coined by Kerouac in the fall of 1948 during a
conversation with Holmes in New York City. The word "beat" referred loosely to
their shared sense of spiritual exhaustion and diffuse feelings of rebellion against what
they experienced as the general conformity, hypocrisy, and materialism of the larger
society around them caught up in the unprecedented prosperity of postwar America.
In the summer of 1948, in his senior year at Columbia, Ginsberg had dedicated himself
to becoming a poet after hearing in a vision the voice of William Blake reciting the poem
"Ah Sunflower." Experimenting with drugs like marijuana and nitrous oxide to
induce further visions, or what Ginsberg later described as "an exalted state of
mind," he felt that the poet’s duty was to bring
a visionary consciousness of reality to his readers. He was dissatisfied with the poetry
he was writing at this time, traditional work modeled on English poets like Sir Thomas
Wyatt or Andrew Marvell whom he had studied at Columbia.
In June 1949 Ginsberg was arrested as an accessory to crimes carried out by Huncke and
his friends, who had stored stolen
goods in Ginsberg’s apartment. As an alternative to a jail sentence, Ginsberg’s professors
Van Doren and Trilling arranged with the Columbia dean for a plea of psychological
disability, on condition that Ginsberg was admitted to the Columbia Presbyterian
Psychiatric Institute. Spending eight months in the mental institution, Ginsberg became
close friends with the young writer Carl Solomon, who was treated there for depression
with insulin shock.
In December 1953 Ginsberg left New York City on a trip to Mexico to explore Indian
ruins in Yucatan and experiment with various drugs. He settled in San Francisco, where he
fell in love with a young artist’s model, Peter Orlovsky; he took a job in market
research, thinking that he might enroll in the graduate English program at the University
of California in Berkeley. In August 1955, inspired by the manuscript of a long jazz poem
titled "Mexico City Blues" that Kerouac had recently written in Mexico City,
Ginsberg found the courage to begin to type what he called his most personal
"imaginative sympathies" in the long poem "Howl for Carl Solomon" (Original
Draft Facsimile Howl, p. xii). As his biographer Bill Morgan stated, in the poem
"Allen finally accepted his homosexuality and stopped trying to become
’straight’" (Allen Ginsberg and Friends, p. 31).
In October 1955 Ginsberg read the first part of his new poem in public for the first time
to tumultuous applause at the Six
Gallery reading in San Francisco with the local poets Kenneth Rexroth, Gary Snyder,
Michael McClure, Philip Whalen, and Philip LaMantia. Journalists were quick to herald the
reading as a landmark event in American poetry, the birth of what they labeled the San
Francisco Poetry Renaissance. Lawrence Ferlinghetti, who ran the City Lights Book Store
and the City Lights publishing house in North Beach, sent Ginsberg a telegram echoing
Ralph Waldo Emerson’s response to Walt Whitman’s Leaves of Grass: "I greet
you at the beginning of a great career. When do I get the manuscript?" Later Ginsberg
wrote that "in publishing ‘Howl,’ I was curious to leave behind after my generation
an emotional time bomb that would continue exploding in U.S. consciousness in case our
military-industrial-nationalist complex solidified into a repressive police
bureaucracy" (Original Draft Facsimile Howl, p. xii).
Early in the following year Howl and Other Poems was published with an
introduction by William Carlos Williams as number four in the City Lights Pocket Poets
Series. In May 1956 copies of the small black-and-white stapled paperback were seized by
the San Francisco police, who arrested Ferlinghetti and Shigeyoshi Murao, his shop
manager, and charged them with publishing and selling an obscene and indecent book. The
American Civil Liberties Union took up the defense of Ginsberg’s poem in a highly
publicized obscenity trial in San Francisco, which concluded in October 1957 when Judge
Clayton Horn ruled that Howl had redeeming social value.
During the furor of the trial, Ginsberg left California and settled in Paris with
Orlovsky, who was to remain his companion
for the next forty years. Living on Ginsberg’s royalties from Howl and Orlovsky’s
disability checks as a Korean War veteran,
they traveled to Tangier to stay with Burroughs and help him assemble the manuscript later
published as his novel Naked Lunch (1959). In 1958 Ginsberg returned to New York
City, still troubled by his mother’s death in the mental hospital two years before,
haunted by the thought that he had never properly said goodbye to her. Using various drugs
to explore his painful memories of their life together and confront his complex feelings
about his mother, Ginsberg wrote his greatest poem, "Kaddish for Naomi
Ginsberg," modeling his elegy on the traditional Jewish memorial service for the
dead.
Continuing to experiment with various psychedelic stimulants to create visionary
poetry, Ginsberg traveled to South America,
Europe, Morocco, and India with Orlovsky in 1962. It was the most important trip of his
life. Staying in India for nearly
two years, he met with holy men in an effort to find someone who could teach him a method
of meditation that would help him
deal with his egotism and serve as a vehicle for heightened spiritual awareness. On a
train in Japan, Ginsberg recorded in his poem "The Change" his realization that
meditation, not drugs, could assist his enlightenment. He returned to North America in the
fall of 1963 to attend the Vancouver Poetry Conference with Charles Olson, Robert Duncan,
Robert Creeley, Denise Levertov, and many other poets who felt that they formed a
community of nonacademic experimental writers.
In 1968 Ginsberg received wide coverage on television during the Democratic National
Convention when he and the members of the National Mobilization Committee who were against
U.S. participation in the war in Vietnam confronted the police in Chicago’s Grant Park.
The poet stayed on an impromptu stage and chanted "Om" in an attempt to calm the
crowds being brutally attacked by tear gas and billy clubs. Ginsberg’s courage, his
humanitarian political views and support of homosexuality, his engagement in Eastern
meditation practices, and his charismatic personality made him one of the favorite
spokesmen chosen by a younger generation of radicalized Americans known as
"hippies" during the end of this turbulent decade.
In the early 1970s Ginsberg’s serious, bearded image with black-rimmed glasses, a tweed
jacket, and an "Uncle Sam" paper top hat became a ubiquitous poster protesting
the Vietnam War. In 1971 Ginsberg met Chogyam Trungpa Rinpoche, who became his meditation
teacher at the Naropa Institute, a Buddhist college in Boulder, Colorado. Three years
later, Ginsberg, assisted by the young poet Anne Waldman, founded a creative writing
program called the Jack Kerouac School of Disembodied Poetics at Naropa. Ginsberg taught
summer poetry workshops there and lectured during the academic year
at Brooklyn College as a tenured distinguished professor until the end of his life.
In his remaining years, publishing steadily and traveling tirelessly despite increasing
health problems with diabetes and the aftereffects of a stroke, Ginsberg gave readings in
Russia, China, Europe, and the South Pacific. In the bardic tradition of William Blake,
who played a pump organ when he read his poetry, Ginsberg often accompanied himself on a
portable harmonium bought in Benares for fifty dollars. He was the archetypal Beat
Generation writer to countless poetry audiences and to the general public. Unlike Kerouac,
who died in 1969, Ginsberg remained a radical poet, the embodiment of the ideals of
personal freedom, nonconformity, and the search for enlightenment. As a member of the
American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters, he unabashedly used his prestige to
champion the work of his friends. Two months short of his seventy-first birthday, he died
of liver cancer at his home in the East Village, New York City.
Bibliography
Along with Ginsberg’s many awards and honors, his list of publications encompasses
hundreds of items. Most notably, in addition to those mentioned above, they include the
collections Reality Sandwiches, 1953-1960 (1963); Planet News, 1961-1967
(1968); Indian Journals: March 1962-May 1963 (1970); The Fall of America:
Poems of These States, 1965-1971 (1972), which won the National Book Award; Gordon
Ball, ed., Allen Verbatim: Lectures on Poetry, Politics, Consciousness (1974); Mind
Breaths: Poems, 1972-1977 (1978); Plutonium Ode: Poems, 1977-1980 (1982); Collected
Poems: 1947-1980 (1985); Barry Miles, ed., Howl: Original Draft Facsimile,
Transcript & Variant Versions, Fully Annotated by Author, with Contemporaneous
Correspondence, Account of First Public Reading, Legal Skirmishes, Precursor Texts &
Bibliography (1986); White Shroud: Poems, 1980-85 (1986); Cosmopolitan
Greetings: Poems, 1986-1992 (1994); Selected Poems, 1947-1995 (1996), and Death
and Fame: Last Poems, 1993-1997 (1999). The front dust wrapper of this last book is a
color photograph of the poet standing in his apartment next to a portrait of Walt Whitman,
both white-bearded. The list of the forty most important Ginsberg titles in his
posthumously published Death and Fame was gathered by his editors Bob Rosenthal,
Peter Hale, and Bill Morgan into the categories of Poetry, Prose, Photography, and Vocal
Words and Music. Bill Morgan compiled the 456-page descriptive Ginsberg bibliography, The
Works of Allen Ginsberg, 1941-1994 (1995). J. W. Ehrlich edited Howl of the
Censor (1961), an account of the 1957 San Francisco trial investigating obcenity in
Ginsberg’s poem. Jane Kramer, Allen Ginsberg in America, was an early biography, followed
by two full-length biographies: Barry Miles, Ginsberg (1989), and Michael
Schumacher, Dharma Lion: A Critical Biography of Allen Ginsberg (1992). Bill
Morgan, archivist for the estate of Allen Ginsberg, prepared the biographical text in Allen
Ginsberg and Friends (New York: Sotheby’s Catalog for Sale 7351, Oct. 7, 1999). An
obituary is in the New York Times, 7 Apr. 1997.
Source: http://www.anb.org/articles/16/16-03394.html;
American National Biography Online June 2000 Update. Access Date: Sun Mar 18
11:32:26 2001 Copyright (c) 2000 American Council of Learned Societies. Published by
Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.
Thomas Gladysz
Allen Ginsberg was born June 3, 1926 and grew up in Paterson, New Jersey. His father,
Louis, was a high school teacher and an accomplished lyric poet. His mother, Naomi, a
Communist during the Depression, suffered from psychotic delusions. At times, she insisted
there were wires in her head with which people could hear her thinking. Coming of age in a
household of modest means, Ginsberg’s early life seemed to steer him away from the
conventional. He was from a family of Jewish Russian immigrants, his family had ties to
the radical labor movement, his mother was insane, and he was a homosexual: four
prescriptions in the conventional1940’s and 1950’s for a sense of deep alienation.
Inspired by Naomi’s "mad idealism" to defend the underpriviliged, Ginsberg
entered Columbia University as a pre-law student. He later changed his major to
literature, and studied under Mark Van Doren and Lionel Trilling. However, more
influential in Ginsberg’s artistic and personal development was the off-campus circle of
friends with whom he became involved. At its center was Jack Kerouac, a former Columbia
student, and the older William S. Burroughs, a sophisticated cosmopolitan hipster who
introduced his younger colleagues to Manhattan’s varied subcultures. Ginsberg’s other
friends and acquintances from the time included the writers Herbert Hunke, John Clellon
Holmes and Lucien Carr (father of bestselling author Caleb Carr) as well as the
charasmatic Neal Cassady. Each would emerge as key figures in the Beat movement of a
decade later.
In 1945, for reasons now clouded in legend, Ginsberg was expelled from Columbia.
Reinstated in 1946, he received his bachelor’s degree two years later. However, nineteen
forty-eight was significant for an experience central to Ginsberg’s life as a poet. Living
in an East Harlem tenement, Ginsberg heard the voice of William Blake intoning "Ah!
Sunflower." Staring out the window
. . . I began noticing in every corner where I looked evidences of a living hand, even
in the bricks, in the arrangement of each brick, Some hand placed them there – that some
hand had placed the whole universe in front of me . . . . Or that God was in front of my
eyes – existence itself was God . . . . what I was seeing was a visionary thing, it was a
lightness in my body . . . my body suddenly felt light, and a sense of cosmic
consciousness, vibrations, understanding, awe, and wonder and surprise. And it was a
sudden awakening into a totally deeper real universe that I’d been existing in.
(Paris Review interview)
The search for a "totally deeper real universe" continued for Ginsberg. He
remained in New York City until 1953, writing (largely conventional) poetry and supporting
himself by working as a book reviewer, market researcher, etc . . . . Deciding to follow
Neal Cassady (with whom he had fallen in love) to San Francisco, Ginsberg travelled to