16 posts tagged “writing”
Source: Reality Studio (more, by Jed Birmingham)
via Ordinary Finds
Across seven decades, Paul created hundreds of pictures. He often gave the originals away. Sometimes, but not always, he kept or received a copy for his own records.
This great man passed away on June 25, 2007, but left behind a collection of his amazing artwork that will be an inspiration for many.
Portland, OR (Original Pub Date: February 11, 2008) – On a February night in 1956, Allen Ginsberg stood in front of a group of students in a dormitory lounge at Reed College and read from a manuscript that a few months later would be published as Howl and Other Poems. "Howl" is Ginsberg's most famous and controversial poem, and a seminal work of the Beat Generation. The book sparked censorship debates that are credited with broadening First Amendment protections.
The February 1956 recording at Reed was duly labeled, cataloged, and then overlooked in the college's library for more than 50 years. Literary scholar John Suiter rediscovered the tape last summer while researching a biography of poet Gary Snyder (Reed Class of 1951, winner of the 1975 Pulitzer Prize for Poetry); Snyder and Ginsberg were on a hitch-hiking trip to the Pacific Northwest at the time the tape was made and spent February 13-14 on campus giving poetry readings. Suiter concludes in a forthcoming article in the Reed alumni magazine that this is the earliest-known recording of Ginsberg reading "Howl." On the recording, Ginsberg reads to the conclusion of Part I, but ends before completing Part II, saying, "I don't really feel like reading any more. I just sorta' haven't got any kind of steam."
The pristine recording of "Howl" caught on tape that night at Reed differs in numerous ways from the legendary first public reading of the poem at San Francisco's Six Gallery in October 1955. It predates by approximately five weeks the previous earliest-known recording of "Howl," made at the Town Hall Theatre in Berkeley on March 18, 1956.
The historic find at Reed provides insight into Ginsberg's writing process and opens a window on the Beats before they were well-known, with Ginsberg joking with his student audience about "corrupting the youth," and commenting about the relationship of "Howl" to the jazz rhythms of Lester Young.
via Reed College
Reed College, in Portland, Oregon, is an undergraduate institution of
the liberal arts and sciences dedicated to sustaining the highest
intellectual standards in the country. With an enrollment of about
1,360 students, Reed ranks third in the undergraduate origins of Ph.D.s
in the United States and second in the number of Rhodes Scholars from a
liberal arts college (31 since 1915). For more information, visit
www.reed.edu.
*Jorge Luis Borges
Burning Underwood Typewriter, originally uploaded by Calmar.
Installation by Argentine conceptual artist Leopoldo Maler titled "Hommage", part of the permant art collection at the Hess winery in Napa Valley.
Maler's uncle, a well-known Argentine writer, is believed to have been killed for the inflammatory content of his political essays. The old Underwood typewriter that now emits flames in the place of words is of the same style that Maler's uncle used during his esteemed career.
Website: www.hesscollection.com
"We’re just not going to be reading for text anymore,” said Saveri, the Institute for the Future researcher. “We’re going to be ‘reading’ for movies, graphics, images, digital stories, symbols,” she says. “You may say young people aren’t reading the classics, but 20 years from now, there might be some classic multimedia pieces with video, with hyperlinks. That’s the new edge of literacy.”
Saveri suggests parents blog with their kids, make a YouTube video, jump into the new media - and take books along. “We’ve got to get over our nostalgia,” she says. “Denying your child a rich media world is doing your child a disservice.”
hat tip swiss miss | image: rebekah's book reviews