"Howling": How this poem was born and made Alan Ginsberg famous when Alan Ginsberg sat in a second-hand type typewriter in 1955 and started many of his subsequent "Haar" . In the first part of the draft, he did not know that controversy would happen. In fact, in particular he does not intend to write a formal poem, especially if he does not consider the publication of poetry. Instead, 29 year old realizes his most famous literary work and begins discussing the reasons for the extensive publicity of the first amendment to freedom of speech.
This movie is the story of Alan Ginsberg's poem "Howling". Obscene, jealousy, lack of value - these are allegations against Allen. In the movie, we witnessed traces in the courtroom, interviewed controversial works with producers of the work, and showed fragments of poetry. Unlike this type of film, this movie ferment "Howl" with beautiful animation. The producers of this movie are balanced with various forms of communication. Everything can be considered complementary, not too much or too few
Alan Ginsberg's innovative poem "Haar" is a powerful depiction of the decline of life. It represents the tough life of the beat generation and records the oppressed struggle. Hull is a poet destroyed. By squeezing individuals, we destroy mind, body and soul. Alan Ginsberg uses powerful terms to represent the abolition of this life and its meaning through human abstract understanding of time, eternity and self. The chaotic phrases and intense emotions of this poem seem to be consistent with the ideas of people who explain it. Ginsberg uses wonderful accuracy and intentional text to incorporate complexity.
Hal was created by Alan Ginsberg in 1955 and is probably one of the most important, most discussed and famous poems of the 20th century. Even the first general reading is one of the major events in the history of contemporary literature (Gaughan 124). At the time of writing Hal, Ginsberg was strongly influenced by the people and events around him. It is worth mentioning because Ginsberg is not an American citizen in the 1950s. Ginsberg has a "Russian Jewish Biography" (Miles 4) born of a poetic and infinite poetry written by mother and father (Laskin 25-26). Young Ginsberg was expelled from school by pupils writing obscene text in the window. After acquiring a literature degree at Columbia University, I became homosexual. At that time, he took a huge amount of medicine, was arrested, treated at a mental hospital, and met the most famous poet of his time (Murphy 181-183).