Kerouac Fest 2006 William Burroughs Naked Lunch and
Kerouac Fest 2006 William Burroughs, Naked Lunch, and Little Magazines
Junkie (Ace 1953)
Junkie (Digit 1957)
Men’s Wildcat Adventures (1959) Excerpts from Junkie appear in June 1959 Presents Burroughs’s work in an exploitation/pornographic vein Throughout the 1960’s and early 1970’s Burroughs pieces would appear in men’s magazines like Mayfair, Playboy, Penthouse and Swank
1957: The Beats Break Out • February/March: Kerouac, Ginsberg, Orlovsky and Alan Ansen assist Burroughs in typing the Naked Lunch manuscript • Spring/Summer: San Francisco Scene issue of Evergreen Review; Norman Mailer writes The White Negro for Dissent • September 5 th: On the Road published and reviewed in New York Times • October: Howl cleared of obscenity charges
Return of the Little Magazine • Long tradition of the little magazine supporting avant garde writing in America (Little Review, Poetry, transition) • By 1950’s the publishing establishment was not supporting alternative writing (New Criterion, Poetry, New Yorker) • Publishing technology cheap and available such as letterpress, offset, mimeo, and overseas
British Journal of Addiction 53, No 2 (January 1957) First publication using William Burroughs’s name First journal/magazine publication Academic journal not pulp fiction like Junkie; shift in presentation of drug experience Highlights Burroughs as expert on drugs like later underground publications in 1960’s
Black Mountain Review 7 (Autumn 1957, Issued Spring 1958) Literary Review of experimental Black Mountain College Edited by Robert Creeley and Allen Ginsberg Along with San Francisco Scene issue of Evergreen Review the most important Beat Magazine; both present Beats as part of larger literary community First Publication of piece of Naked Lunch
Yugen (1958) “A new consciousness in arts and letters” Edited by Hettie Cohen and Leroi Jones (Amiri Baraka) for 8 issues from 1958 -1962 Precursor to landmark Donald Allen New American Poetry Anthology Published piece of Naked Lunch; Burroughs’s work presented as avant garde, experimental
Interpol (1958) September 28, 1958 letter from Burroughs and Gregory Corso to Allen Ginsberg proposing starting a magazine Written from Beat Hotel Highlights the importance of the little magazine as Burroughs struggled to get published Never published but this idea reappeared in the underground newspapers of the 1960’s and in magazines like The Marijuana Newsletter and High Times
Chicago Review Literary Magazine of the University of Chicago Spring 1958 Edited by Irving Rosenthal and Paul Carroll among others In 1958 published several pieces of Beat writing including first large scale publication of Naked Lunch Autumn 1958
Trouble on the Midway Chicago Daily News Columnist Jack Mabley reads the Autumn issue and writes “Filthy Writing on the Midway” Chicago University halts publication of the Winter Issue of Chicago Review containing Naked Lunch, Kerouac’s Old Angel Midnight and Edward Dahlberg’s The Garment of Ra The editorial board of Chicago Review resigns taking the material for the suppressed issue with them
Big Table 1 (Spring 1959) Rosenthal and Carroll start Big Table Named by Jack Kerouac January 29, 1959: Ginsberg and Corso read in Chicago to raise funds for Big Table 10, 000 copies of Big Table published and eventually sell out
The Post Office and Censorship Post Office seizes copies of Big Table and denies it second class mailing privileges Contents of Big Table undergo obscenity trial July 9, 1959 Big Table ruled obscene
Olympia Press Naked Lunch (1959) In 1958 Maurice Girodias rejects Naked Lunch manuscript After Big Table ruled obscene, Girodias reconsiders Naked Lunch Late July 1959, 5000 copies of Naked Lunch published in Paris Illegal to sell Naked Lunch in United Kingdom and US
Burroughs on Little Magazines "So it was publication in a little magazine that led to the publication of Naked Lunch at a time when I had almost given up. For many years I sent out pieces to all little magazines that asked me for a contribution. ” --William Burroughs
Grove Press and Naked Lunch Barney Rosset of Grove Press prints 3, 500 copies of Naked Lunch in 1959 Rosset battles against censorship to publish D. H. Lawrence, Henry Miller and other classic authors Naked Lunch sits in warehouse until 1962
Evergreen Review (1960) Literary magazine of Grove Press Publishes introduction to Naked Lunch: Deposition Testimony Concerning a Sickness For legal reasons Naked Lunch packaged as satire and social commentary Critical reception of Naked Lunch dictated by legal battles
Floating Bear 9 (1961) Edited by Leroi Jones and Diane Di Prima Publishes Roosevelt After Inauguration from Yage Letters Seized for obscenity Delays release of Naked Lunch in United States
Grove Press Naked Lunch (1962) Rosset wins obscenity trials concerning Lady Chatterley’s Lover and Tropic of Cancer Naked Lunch released to bookstores in late 1962 The book is promptly banned in Boston and goes to obscenity trial
Naked Lunch Trial Like Howl, Tropic of Cancer, Ulysses, and Lady Chatterley’s Lover, Naked Lunch goes to trial After several setbacks, the Massachusetts Supreme Court rules Naked Lunch not obscene in 1966 based on the US Supreme Court’s recent obscenity rulings concerning Fanny Hill and other works The literary censorship on the basis of obscenity ended in the United States
Today’s Scene • The economics of publishing industry essentially censors publication of experimental writing • The political climate encourages the curtailing of basic freedoms • Availability of old and new technologies makes possible self publishing as never before
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