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5 volumes in various formats. A Tribute to Jim Lowell (Cleveland: Ghost Press, 1967) first edition, octavo, stapled wrappers with screenprinted cover, very slightly soiled, near fine, limited to 500 copies; Where is Vietnam?: American Poets Respond (Garden City: Doubleday, 1967) first edition, near fine mass market paperback with very slight rubbing; New Directions in Prose and Poetry 27 (New York: New Directions, 1973) first edition, wrappers rubbed with crease along spine, loose first leaf, very good, inscribed twice by Coleman Dowell; Poetry Festival: Commissioned Poems 1962 (San Francisco: Poetry Center, San Francisco State College, 1962) first edition, stapled die-cut illustrated orange wrappers, quarto, fine; New Directions in Prose and Poetry 25 (New York: New Directions, 1972) first edition, fine in fine dust jacket. Ferlinghetti was an important member of the collaborative networks that sustained postwar American poetry. A Tribute to Jim Lowell unites underground and establishment voices Bukowski, Olson, Denise Levertov, Robert Lowell, Selby, and McClure among others in a memorial that demonstrates the respect commanded across the fractured landscape of 1960s poetry. Where is Vietnam? channels poetic innovation toward anti-war activism, featuring Ferlinghetti alongside Ginsberg, Kunitz, and Lowell in direct response to American military intervention. The Poetry Festival commission pairs him with Brother Antoninus, Thom Gunn, and Muriel Rukeyser in a Bay Area gathering, while the two New Directions anthologies position his work within James Laughlin's ongoing project to define American literary modernism alongside figures like Tennessee Williams, Gary Snyder, and international voices. Ferlinghetti's dual role as poet and publisher through City Lights Books made him central to the dissemination of Beat literature and experimental writing. His own accessible, politically engaged verse challenged academic formalism while his publishing enterprise provided material infrastructure for poets working outside commercial channels. These anthologies document his connections across multiple poetic communities during the three decades when American poetry fragmented into competing schools and aesthetic programs.
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