|
|
Allen
Ginsberg is the winner of numerous awards for poetry, and
initiator of the beat genre of poetry. When he was a 22-year-old
graduate student, he experienced a psychotic episode which
transformed his life. The episode began with auditory hallucinations
of the visionary 18th-century poet William Blake. Ginsberg
believed that he was being chosen as a "spirit angel" and
was having a "cosmic vibration breakthrough." His
psychiatrist thought he was showing the signs of a major mental
illness and had him hospitalized for 8 months.
Yet the week of communing with the spirit of Blake had a profound
and lasting impact on his life and poetry. In an interview
with his biographer Portugues (1978), Ginsberg claimed that, "the
voice I heard, the voice of Blake, the ancient saturnal voice,
is the voice I have now." Most of the poems he wrote for
the next 15 years were, he has stated, attempts to rekindle
in himself and in others, the state of visionary consciousness
he experienced while psychotic. For him, the spiritual aspects
of his experience were paramount and his psychotic episode
a source of personal renewal. He never had any psychotic episodes
which required hospitalization during the rest of life.
Portugues, P. (1978). The Visionary Poetics of Allen Ginsberg.
Santa Barbara, CA: Ross-Erikson.
<< Back to Case Library
|