Snyder, Gary

Snyder, Gary

▪ American poet
in full  Gary Sherman Snyder 
born May 8, 1930, San Francisco, Calif., U.S.

      American poet early identified with the Beat movement and, from the late 1960s, an important spokesman for the concerns of communal living and ecological activism. Snyder received the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry in 1975.

      Snyder was educated at Reed College (B.A., 1951) in Portland, Ore., where he became friends with Philip Whalen (Whalen, Philip), a classmate and future Beat poet. Snyder studied anthropology at Indiana University (1951–52) before moving to San Francisco, where he lived with Whalen and became friends with Allen Ginsberg (Ginsberg, Allen) and Jack Kerouac (Kerouac, Jack). In 1955 Snyder was among the poets who participated in the historic reading at the Six Gallery at which Ginsberg introduced his poem Howl. The following year Snyder traveled to Japan to study Zen Buddhism. In 1986 he began teaching at the University of California, Davis; he retired as professor emeritus in 2002.

      Snyder's poetry draws on the mythic and religious experience of his own daily life in his verse. His free verse style exhibits a variety of influences from Walt Whitman to Ezra Pound to Japanese haiku. Prominent in his first two books of poems, Riprap (1959) and Myths and Texts (1960), are images and experiences drawn from his work as a logger and ranger in the U.S. Pacific Northwest. In The Back Country (1967) and Regarding Wave (1969), the fusion of religion into everyday life reflects Snyder's increasing interest in Eastern philosophies. Later volumes include Turtle Island (1974), for which he won the Pulitzer Prize, and Axe Handles (1983). His alternatives to routinized city life are presented in Earth House Hold (1969), a book of journal fragments and essays, and The Real Work: Interviews and Talks 1964–1979 (1980).

      Snyder's later publications include The Old Ways (1977), a selection of essays on aspects of tribal life; He Who Hunted Birds in His Father's Village, an examination of Haida Indian myth, published in 1979 but written as an academic paper more than 25 years earlier; and Passage Through India (1984), an account of an Asian pilgrimage. In 1986 Snyder published Left Out in the Rain, a compilation of poems that spanned 40 years. No Nature, consisting mostly of poems previously published in other volumes, was a finalist for the 1992 National Book Award. He also received critical acclaim for Mountains and Rivers Without End (1996), which completed a series that Snyder had begun writing in 1956. The collection won the Bollingen Prize in Poetry in 1997. Six Sections of Mountains and Rivers Without End (1965) and Six Sections from Mountains and Rivers Without End, Plus One (1970) were earlier versions of this work.

      In 2004 Snyder published his first volume of all-new poetry in 20 years, Danger on Peaks, a collection that stays true to his earlier work by bringing nature into the reader's inner vision. A longtime advocate of environmental issues, Snyder argued in Back on the Fire: Essays (2007) that forest fires can be beneficial and that government actions to fight them often work against natural processes. In 2008 Snyder was awarded the Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize.

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Universalium. 2010.

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  • Snyder, Gary — (1930– )    Gary Snyder became connected with the Beat movement as a result of his participation in the famous October 1955 Six Gallery reading in San Francisco where allen ginsberg first performed the first section of Howl. Part of the West… …   Encyclopedia of Beat Literature

  • Snyder, Gary (Sherman) — born May 8, 1930, San Francisco, Calif., U.S. U.S. poet. Snyder worked as a forest ranger, logger, and seaman and studied Zen Buddhism in Japan (1958–66). His poetry, early identified with the Beat movement, is rooted in ancient, natural, and… …   Universalium

  • Snyder, Gary (Sherman) — (n. 8 may. 1930, San Francisco, Cal., EE.UU.). Poeta estadounidense. Snyder trabajó como guardabosques, leñador y marinero, además de estudiar budismo zen en Japón (1958–66). Su poesía, identificada desde el comienzo con el movimiento Beat,… …   Enciclopedia Universal

  • Gary Snyder — Born May 8, 1930 (1930 05 08) (age 81) San Francisco, California Occupation Poet, essayist, travel writer, translator, educator Nationality American Period 1950 present …   Wikipedia

  • Gary SNYDER — Pour les articles homonymes, voir Snyder. Gary Sherman Snyder est un poète, traducteur, penseur et activiste américain né le 8 mai 1930 à San Francisco. Il est une figure importante au sein des mouvements de la Beat Generation, des… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Gary Snyder — Nacimiento 8 de mayo de 1930 (81 años) San Francisco (California …   Wikipedia Español

  • Gary Snyder — (* 8. Mai 1930 in San Francisco) ist ein US amerikanischer Schriftsteller und Umweltaktivist. Leben Gary Snyder wuchs in den Bundesstaaten Oregon und Washington auf. Er studierte zunächst Anthropologie am Reed College in Portland und schloss… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • SNYDER (G.) — SNYDER GARY (1930 ) Pour Jack Kerouac et Allen Ginsberg, arrivant de la côte est à San Francisco (où le mouvement beat a pris naissance), Gary Snyder, natif du Nord Ouest (Oregon), était «le type le plus fou et le plus intelligent que nous ayons… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Gary Snyder — Pour les articles homonymes, voir Snyder. Gary Sherman Snyder est un poète, traducteur, penseur et militant américain né le 8 mai 1930 à San Francisco. C est une figure importante au sein des mouvements de la Beat Generation, des… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Gary — /gair ee, gar ee/, n. 1. Elbert Henry, 1846 1927, U.S. financier and lawyer. 2. a port in NW Indiana, on Lake Michigan. 151,953. 3. a male given name: from an Old English word meaning spear bearer. * * * I City (pop., 2000: 102,746), northwestern …   Universalium

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