Arts & Culture
Tomorrow · Museums & Exhibitions

Ginsberg at 100: Selections from the Allen Ginsberg Papers at Stanford

JUN 23 12 a.m. Green Library, Bing Wing

About this event

Stanford University Libraries presents Ginsberg at 100: Selections from the Allen Ginsberg Papers at Stanford, on view in the Peterson Gallery and Munger Rotunda of the Cecil H. Green Library from June 5 to September 5, 2026. In honor of the centenary of Allen Ginsberg’s birth on June 3, 1926, Stanford University Libraries will host its first-ever exhibition of Ginsberg, exploring his complex legacy as a poet, activist, promoter, traveler, spiritual seeker, and teacher. The exhibition will draw upon the extensive array of notebooks, diaries, manuscripts, photos, and other items from the Allen Ginsberg Papers, a collection acquired by the Department of Special Collections at Stanford in 1995. Allen Ginsberg’s poem “Howl for Carl Solomon” launched the Beat Generation to fame and notoriety upon its publication in Howl and Other Poems by City Lights Books in 1956. Following an infamous obscenity trial in San Francisco, Ginsberg embraced his role as a free speech advocate and deftly managed his newfound media celebrity. An out gay man over a decade before Stonewall and a public advocate for drug experimentation, he became a spokesperson for rebellion against the conformity of the postwar Eisenhower era. Ginsberg also assiduously promoted the work of his fellow writers, shopping their work to mainstream and underground publishers, defending them from censorship, and bolstering the appeal and notoriety of the Beat Generation. In the 1960s, Ginsberg transformed himself into an irreverent guru to the youth counterculture, appearing at many of the decade’s seminal events, including the Human Be-In, held in San Francisco’s Golden Gate Park in January of 1967, a prelude to the Summer of Love. During this time, he also became a prominent public figure for the antiwar movement, participating in protests in the Bay Area and at the Democratic National Convention in Chicago. As a young man, Ginsberg experienced a series of mystical visions that impressed upon him the vast, eternal n

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