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Ruth weiss (beat poet)

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Ruth Weiss (June 24, 1928 – July 31, 2020), better known by the lowercase name ruth weiss, was a poet, performer, playwright and artist. Born in Germany, but of Austrian citizenship, weiss made her home and career in the United States. She was considered to be a member of the Beat Generation, a label she in later years embraced.[1]

Spelling her name in lowercase was a symbolic protest against "law and order", since in her birthplace of Germany all nouns are spelled capitalized.

Biography

Early life

She came from a climate of political turmoil. Born to a Jewish family in the tumultuous years of the rise of Nazism, her early childhood was spent fleeing her home with her parents. Their bid for survival took them from their home of Berlin to Vienna and eventually to the Netherlands, whereby weiss and her parents left for the United States. In 1939, they arrived in New York City and from there moved on to Chicago. She excelled academically at school in Chicago, graduating in the top 1% of her class. However, in 1946 the family moved back to Germany, this time not as German citizens but as American citizens, as her parents worked for the Army of Occupation. She went on to school in Switzerland and spent much time hitchhiking and writing - two skills that would prove pivotal to her future in the American Bohemian Beat scene.[2] In 1948, weiss and her parents moved back to the United States, resettling in Chicago.

Early career 1940s–1950s

She left home in 1949, at first staying in Chicago where she moved into the Art Circle - a housing community for artists. It was in this community that she began experimenting with poetry and jazz. In 1950, she left Chicago and hitchhiked to Greenwich Village in New York City, then later in 1950 moved to the Old French Quarter in New Orleans.[3] In 1952 she decided to move to San Francisco, where she began jamming and reading poetry with street musicians. Shortly after, several of her friends opened a club called The Cellar, in which she would hold poetry and jazz sessions every Wednesday night. Eventually, weiss felt that she needed a break from city life and took off for California's Big Sur, a place made famous as a Beat center due to Jack Kerouac's novel of the same name. In Breaking the Rule of Cool: Interviewing and Reading Women Beat Writers, weiss details the events at The Cellar following her departure. In regards to the poetry-jazz sessions, she tells her interviewer, "...other well-known poets, whose names I'm not going to mention because everyone knows them, ended up doing the same thing. Only they were very smart. They recorded them and got records out of them. So nobody knows that I did this, innovate jazz and poetry in San Francisco in 1956 at The Cellar." [4] During this period in her life, she also began publishing proliferously in the magazine Beatitude, one of the first magazines for Beat writers.[5]

In 1952, she and Jack Kerouac had, in her words, a "fantastic connection on multiple levels." [6] It was two years after Kerouac had published his first novel, The Town and the City, though weiss did not yet know that he had written and published a book.[6] Instead, weiss and Kerouac engaged in a "haiku dialogue," spending hours over a bottle of wine writing haiku back and forth to one another. Occasionally Neal Cassady would drop in and the three of them would drive off, adventuring outwards in California at dangerous speeds up dangerous hills, thriving on the excitement of the ride and one another's presence.[6]

In 1957, weiss started a "salon kind of situation" in her apartment, creating a gathering space for poets and writers to read and discuss their works.[7] It was also in that year that she married her first husband, Mel Weitsman, who later became a Zen priest. Two years later in 1959, weiss published her poetry collection Gallery of Women, paying homage to the female poets whom she most admired by painting their portraits through her jazz-inspired poetry.[5]

1960s–1970s

In 1961, weiss finished her narrative poem "The Brink." Upon reviewing her poem, the painter Paul Beattie asked if weiss could turn it into a film script, a request which she willingly obliged. By 1961, weiss had finished her creation and filming of The Brink, incorporating "found objects" into her style and philosophy towards the film.[8]

However, Desert Journal is the work that weiss herself described as her masterpiece and her most significant work to-date. The piece is an exploration of a mind in a desert. The poem's subject spends 40 days and nights in a desert and each day of the desert is limited to a poem of five pages, each day being its own poem within the greater whole. Everyday, the gender-warping subject of the poem has a new area of exploration and revelation, and the poem brings the reader through the highs and lows, the turmoil and the peace, that the disembodied protagonist transverses. She began writing this poem in 1961 and spent seven years on it, not completing it until 1968. It was published in 1977.[9] She described this poem, like the bulk of her work, as a performance piece, a piece whose meaning she can fully express only through enacting it.[10]

She asserted that, during the 60s, she began spelling her name solely in lower case.[11]

Later career 1980s–2010s

In 1990, weiss won the Bay Area poetry slam and consequently released recordings of her poetry performance, entitled Poetry & Allthatjazz. [12]

In 1996, weiss' film The Brink was screened at the Whitney Museum.[5]

She has published many poems and anthologies in recent years, including Full Circle, a reflection on her escape from Nazi Germany. Her work also had a three-month exhibition at the San Francisco Public Library.[5]

She continued to perform live in North Beach and at many jazz and poetry festivals, including appearances at the San Francisco Beat Festival in 2016.

An award winning feature documentary has been made about her life story called "ruth weiss, the beat goddess" directed by Melody C. Miller and produced by Elisabeth P. Montgomery. [13] [14] The film premiered at the Asolo Art Film Festival in Italy and won Best Documentary at the Peekskill Film Festival in New York.[15] [16] [17] [18] She was awarded the 2020 Maverick Spirit Award from the Cinequest Film Festival.[19] This prestigious award is given to influential individuals who embody the independent and innovative mindset and has previously been awarded to Werner Herzog, Harrison Ford, Jackie Chan, and many more. [20]

Influences

She credits Gertrude Stein, Virginia Woolf, the French New Wave and Djuna Barnes, among many others, as her most significant influences.

However, as she primarily considered herself a "jazz poet," she has also credited jazz and bebop as the art most influential upon her own. In Breaking the Rules of Cool, weiss recounts a night in 1949 while she was living in the Art Circle of Chicago. On this night, there was a crowd of people in her building having a jazz jam session downstairs while weiss was preoccupied writing in her room. However, a friend of hers paid a visit, read her work and recommended that she bring it downstairs and read it to the musicians. The musicians, far from halting their music to listen, listened by continuing to jam as she read, and likewise, weiss listened to and communicated with their jazz by incorporating it into her poem. It is that experience that she credited as the beginning of her "whole thing with jazz and poetry." [4]

Style

The philosophy behind her work incorporates several interlinking components: being a "street poet," being a "jazz poet," the idea of non-linearity and fragmentation, the idea of discipline and the bare "bones" of language.

Her focus upon succinctness and discipline is epitomized in her predilection for haikus. She relished the haiku for the discipline it imposes upon the writer and the way it forces the "fat" to be cut away from the poem, revealing the most essential elements of language.[21]

Similarly, this focus upon "cutting out the fat" lies at the heart of her artistic journey with Desert Journal. One person who reviewed Desert Journal described weiss as "master of the eraser." [21] It is this ability to "erase" that characterizes weiss's work and that she herself found most pivotal to her style. She described it as epitomizing the process that she went through with all her work: the idea of non-linearity, of beginning with a core and allowing the essential fragments that develop to become the substance of the piece.

She also cited being inspired by the "oral tradition." She explained this in light of her close friendship and artistic connection with the famed poet Madeline Gleason. Her poetry, she said, is a performance, it is something communicated by the voice and body.[22]

Finally, weiss declared that while she is not a "street poet" in the traditional sense, her work resonates most in "street" settings or other unexpected places. She has found that her work is often most acclaimed, connected with and called for in places ranging from streets to pizza places to gay bars, drawing a large, diverse crowd.[23]

Bibliography

Books

  • Steps (1958)
  • Gallery of Women (1959)
  • South Pacific (1959)
  • Blue in Green (1960)
  • The Brink (1961) film
  • Light and Other Poems (1976)
  • Desert Journal (1977, new edition 2012 by Trembling Pillow Press)
  • Single Out (1978)
  • For These Women of the Beat (1997)
  • A New View of Matter / Nový pohled na věc (1999)
  • Full Circle / Ein Kreis vollendet sich (2002)
  • Africa (2003)
  • White is All Colors / Weiß ist alle Farben (2004)
  • No Dancing Aloud / Lautes Tanzen nicht erlaubt (2006)
  • Can't Stop the Beat: The Life and Words of a Beat Poet (2011)
  • A Fool's Journey / Die Reise des Narren (2012)
  • A Parallel Planet of People and Places (2012)
  • Einen Schritt weiter im Westen ist die See [One More Step West is the Sea] (2012)
  • The Snake Sez Yesssss / Die Schlange sagt Jetzzzzzt (2013)

Contributions to anthologies (selection)

  • Beatitude Anthology (1960)
  • Peace & Pieces. An Anthology of Contemporary American Poetry (1973)
  • This is Women's Work. An Anthology of Prose and Poetry (1974)
  • Contemporary Fiction: Today's Outstanding Writers (1976)
  • 19+1: An Anthology of San Francisco Poetry (1978)
  • Second Coming Anthology (1984)
  • A Different Beat: Writings by Women of the Beat Generation (1997)
  • The Outlaw Bible of American Poetry (1999)
  • Beat Attitude: Antología de mujeres poetas de la generación beat (2015)
  • Beat Attitude: Femmes poètes de la Beat Generation (2018)
  • Austrian Beat (2018)

Filmography

Acting

  • The Brink (1961)
  • The Liberation of the Mannique Mechanique (1967), dir. Steven Arnold
  • Messages, Messages (1968), dir. Steven Arnold
  • Various Incantations of a Tibetan Seamstress (1969), dir. Steven Arnold
  • Luminous Procuress (1971), dir. Steven Arnold
  • Las Cuevas de Albion (2001)
  • Ibéria (2007), dir. Eddy Falconer

Directing

  • The Brink (1961)

Documentaries

  • Surprise Voyage (2001), dir. Paul Blake
  • Breaking the Rules: Across American Counterculture (2006), dir. Marco Müller
  • ruth weiss Meets Her Prometheus (2007), dir. Frederick Baker
  • San Francisco's Wild History Groove: Underground Artists and Poets from the California Beat Era (2011), dir. Mary Kerr
  • Steven Arnold: Heavenly Bodies (2019), dir. Vishnu Dass
  • ruth weiss, the beat goddess (2019), dir. Melody C. Miller [24]

References

  1. ^ Grace, Nancy M. and Ronna C. Johnson. Breaking the Rule of Cool: Interviewing and Reading Women Beat Writers. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 1998. pp. 59.
  2. ^ Knight, Brenda, Anne Waldman and Ann Charters. Women of the Beat Generation: The Writers, Artists and Muses at the Heart of a Revolution. Berkeley: Conari Press, 1996. pp. 241-243.
  3. ^ Can't Stop the Beat: The Life and Words of a Beat Poet (2011), pp. 179-180
  4. ^ a b Grace, Nancy M. and Ronna C. Johnson. Breaking the Rule of Cool: Interviewing and Reading Women Beat Writers. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 1998. pp. 70.
  5. ^ a b c d https://web.archive.org/web/20110724223330/http://www.digihitch.com/road-culture/beat-generation/474
  6. ^ a b c Grace, Nancy M. and Ronna C. Johnson. Breaking the Rule of Cool: Interviewing and Reading Women Beat Writers. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 1998. pp. 64.
  7. ^ Grace, Nancy M. and Ronna C. Johnson. Breaking the Rule of Cool: Interviewing and Reading Women Beat Writers. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 1998. pp. 72.
  8. ^ Grace, Nancy M. and Ronna C. Johnson. Breaking the Rule of Cool: Interviewing and Reading Women Beat Writers. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 1998. pp. 63.
  9. ^ Grace, Nancy M. and Ronna C. Johnson. Breaking the Rule of Cool: Interviewing and Reading Women Beat Writers. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 1998. pp. 67.
  10. ^ Grace, Nancy M. and Ronna C. Johnson. Breaking the Rule of Cool: Interviewing and Reading Women Beat Writers. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 1998. pp. 66.
  11. ^ Grace, Nancy M. and Ronna C. Johnson. Breaking the Rule of Cool: Interviewing and Reading Women Beat Writers. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 1998. pp. 69.
  12. ^ Knight, Brenda, Anne Waldman and Ann Charters. Women of the Beat Generation: The Writers, Artists and Muses at the Heart of a Revolution. Berkeley: Conari Press, 1996. pp. 246.
  13. ^ "THE FILM". ruth weiss the beat goddess. Retrieved 2019-08-06.
  14. ^ Ruth Weiss: the Beat Goddess, retrieved 2019-08-06
  15. ^ "ruth weiss, the beat goddess". Asolo Art Film Festival (in Italian). Retrieved 2019-08-06.
  16. ^ "Asolo Art Film Festival 2019: protagonista la Danza". MusiCulturA on line (in Italian). 2019-06-12. Retrieved 2019-08-06.
  17. ^ May-Suzuki, Christian. "Resident filmmaker's documentary on Child Sex Trafficking Making Change throughout the Country | Culver City News". Retrieved 2019-08-06.
  18. ^ admin. "2019 BEST DOCUMENTARY: ruth weiss, the beat goddess". Peekskill Film Festival. Retrieved 2019-08-06.
  19. ^ "Maverick Spirit Award - ruth weiss". Cinequest Film Festival. Retrieved 2020-02-08.
  20. ^ "Cinequest announces big lineup for 30th annual festival". The Mercury News. 2020-01-23. Retrieved 2020-02-08.
  21. ^ a b Grace, Nancy M. and Ronna C. Johnson. Breaking the Rule of Cool: Interviewing and Reading Women Beat Writers. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 1998. pp. 65.
  22. ^ Grace, Nancy M. and Ronna C. Johnson. Breaking the Rule of Cool: Interviewing and Reading Women Beat Writers. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 1998. pp. 74.
  23. ^ Grace, Nancy M. and Ronna C. Johnson. Breaking the Rule of Cool: Interviewing and Reading Women Beat Writers. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 1998. pp. 76.
  24. ^ "ruth weiss the beat goddess". ruth weiss the beat goddess. Retrieved 2020-01-11.

Further reading

  • Knight, Brenda, Anne Waldman and Ann Charters. Women of the Beat Generation: The Writers, Artists and Muses at the Heart of a Revolution. Berkeley: Conari Press, 1996.
  • Grace, Nancy M. and Ronna C. Johnson. Breaking the Rule of Cool: Interviewing and Reading Women Beat Writers. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 1998.
  • Whaley, Preston. Blows Like a Horn: Beat Writing, Jazz, Style, and Markets in the Transformation of U.S. Culture. Cambridge: Harvard UP, 2004.
  • Gracy, Nancy M. "ruth weiss's DESERT JOURNAL: A Modern-Beat-Pomo Performance." In Reconstructing the Beats. Ed. by Jennie Skerl. New York: Palgrave MacMillan, 2004.
  • Spandler, Horst. “ruth weiss and the American Beat Movement of the ‘50s and ‘60s.” In Can’t Stop the Beat: The Life and Words of a Beat Poet. Los Angeles: Divine Arts, 2011.
  • Antonic, Thomas. "From the Margin of the Margin to the 'Goddess of the Beat Generation': ruth weiss in the Beat Field, or: 'It's Called Marketing, Baby.'" In Out of the Shadows: Beat Women Are Not Beaten Women. Ed. by Frida Forsgren and Michael J. Prince. Kristiansand: Portal Books, 2015.
  • Encarnación-Pinedo, Estíbaliz.  “Beat & Beyond: Memoir, Myth and Visual Arts in Women of the Beat Generation.” Dissertation. Universidad de Murcia, 2016.