Learning from Allen Ginsberg
Beat-icon Allen Ginsberg is getting a resurgence of attention,
13 years after his death at the age of 70. A movie based on the story behind
Ginsberg's signature poem, "Howl," opens this Friday. It stars
James Franco as the young poet embroiled in a 1957 obscenity trial
over the poem, which ended in a landmark win for free speech. The
movie is already garnering praise for animated sequences (made
partially in Thailand) that put images to Howl's words. Director
Rob Epstein noted that Ginsberg, a fan of Eastern religions, "would
appreciate us outsourcing to a Buddhist country."
And an
exhibition of Ginsberg's photography, "Beat Memories," played
to enthusiastic crowds all summer at Washington-D.C.'s National
Gallery of Art. Ginsberg had both a unique eye and unique access to
a generation of literary heroes, snapping classic portraits like
Jack Kerouac smoking on a fire escape and William Burroughs
standing next to a sphinx at the Museum of Natural History.
Reason.tv's Nick Gillespie looks at why Ginsberg-a champion of gay
rights, free speech, nonviolence, and drug legalization-still has a
lot to teach us.
Approximately 2.30. Produced by Jim Epstein and Nick Gillespie
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