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[police brutality in Cleveland] / Anonymous: about d.a. levy; rjs; Lowell J; levy da; Ginsberg A; Fugs; Heilbrun S., 1967

 Item
Identifier: CC-60916-10003772

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Scope and Contents

This polemic deals with the reprecussions of the arrests of d.a. levy and James Lowell on obscenity charges. According to Brandon Thomas DiSabatino on internet: As the regional headlines mark the 50th anniversary of the Hough Riots, I recall a line in a poem by d.a. levy, observing the madness that erupted from July 18th to July 23rd on the east side of Cleveland: they are looting stores trying to get televisions so they can watch the riots/on the 11 pm news It is an image my mind has conjured during riots and subsequent lootings over the past few years "” in Ferguson, in Baltimore "” where the strange, seemingly unmovable biases and struggles of class warfare appear inseparable from the American landscape. levy was born and raised in Cleveland, and he incorporated the Hough Riots in his poetry as he incorporated every aspect of Cleveland during the mid-to-late 60s. His self-described artistic mission was to give the city its own singular breed of poetry, regardless of whether the city was indifferent or openly hostile to such a notion. Ultimately, the latter proved to be the case. da levy leaving the Cuyahoga County Courthouse with Dagmar Mara Ferek and Robert Sigmund. d.a. levy leaving the Cuyahoga County Courthouse with Dagmar Mara Ferek and Robert Sigmund. levy was arrested and charged with five counts of contributing to the delinquency of minors during a public reading of his work. He also faced charges for publishing and dispersing obscene literature after a secret indictment by the Cuyahoga Grand Jury. James Lowell, owner of the Asphodel Bookshop, where levy's mimeographed literary journals were sold, was also arrested on charges of obscenity.This is 1967, eight years after the landmark Supreme Court Case lifted the ban on Tropic of Cancer, Lady Chatterley's Lover and Fanny Hill. This is 1967 in Cleveland, only months after a devastating riot involving national guardsmen, arsonists, assassination and civil decay. This is 1967 in Cleveland, where Carl B. Stokes was the first African-American mayor elected to a major city; where the first successful coronary artery bypass operation was performed at Cleveland Clinic; where prosecuting a 24 year-old man for writing poems that reflected the speech of ordinary people was of the highest priority for public safety. As Larry Smith details in the book, d.a. levy & the mimeograph revolution, levy described his occupation as a poet who sells poetry "for 89 cents a day," to which Judge Frank Celebrezze responded, "maybe you should charge more than 89 cents," setting his bail at $2,500. The cafes where levy and other Cleveland poets read were raided and shut down. High schoolers were interrogated, their lockers searched; they were asked if levy was distributing narcotics along with hisprofane poetry. levy's work materials were also confiscated as evidence and never returned. A defense fund was established, and though Allen Ginsberg and nearly 200 others gathered on his behalf, the Cleveland police put them all against a wall at gunpoint despite the absence of any legal basis. In July of the following year, only a few days shy of the Hough Riots' first anniversary, the Glenville Riots would occur, triggering another intervention by the National Guard, more violence, more deaths. levy would observe this as well. The riots in Hough and Glenville would inspire the opening scene of his epic piece, "Suburban Monastery Death Poem" in 1968: only ten blocks away from my total helplessness from my boredom enforced by the state they are looting stores trying to get televisions so they can watch the riots on the 11pm news the national guard jeeps patrol the streets again the army-green trucks with the giant white star on the side moving in the summer lightning i cld tell you partly why it happened but you wouldn't believe me ["¦] i cld try to tell you about the hopeless despair ingrained in the ghetto walls & police brutality or police stupidity or police reality is more than just words to define situation by students looking for a cause the situations exist and continue quietly in the dark while the protest goes on in daylight "“ both unheard ["¦] during the riots i watched the news & didn't pick sides for a change i just sat wondering about all the living room revolutionaries safe in the suburbs who cheered every time someone was shot or a building went up in smoke ten blocks away it was real thousands of tourists arrived." levy had attempted to galvanize the artists of Cleveland, to give identity to a place people were routinely leaving for other, more desirable cities. Instead, he was hunted, persecuted; rejected summarily from a place he refused to leave, at least in any physical sense. He would write: cleveland i gave you poems that no one else had time to write & you arrested me ["¦] In 1968, at age 26, levy committed suicide. Despite a poster of his face above the stairwell of Mac's Backs-Books in Coventry, levy remains an elusive, under-anthologized and overlooked poet, in Northeast Ohio and abroad. There have been no efforts to collect his works under any major imprint. levy did not believe in copyright, so theoretically, a publisher could reprint the whole of his work with no need for contracts, residuals, compensation. But levy's observations remain as virile as ever "“ the warring forces of political unrest, systemic bigotry and violence as a spectator sport reflect present-day America as much as they did Cleveland in the 60s. -- Source of annotation: Marvin or Ruth Sackner.

Dates

  • Creation: 1967

Creator

Extent

0 See container summary (1 page (typed, both sides)) ; 28 x 22 cm

Language of Materials

From the Collection: English

Physical Location

shelf binder second bedroom alcove

Custodial History

The Sackner Archive of Concrete and Visual Poetry, on loan from Ruth and Marvin A. Sackner and the Sackner Family Partnership.

General

General: Title provided by Marvin or Ruth Sackner. Published: Cleveland, Ohio : [Publisher not identified]. Nationality of creator: American. General: Added by: MARVIN; updated by: MARVIN.

Repository Details

Part of the The Ruth and Marvin Sackner Archive of Concrete and Visual Poetry Repository

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