Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 21 de jun. de 1996 · Anne Waldman and Allen Ginsberg lecture on dharma poetics, including discussions of Lewis Carroll and six impossible ideas before breakfast, poetry as Siddhi, the importance of writers making connections, writing from inside one's own death, Bodhissattva vows and human compassion, poetry as sacrament, the founding of the Jack Kerouac School of ...

  2. 27 de mar. de 2024 · Allen Ginsberg’s 1982 Naropa lecture on Dharma Poetics continues from here – AG: As language is one of the, let us say, continuum that one appreciates, a little deeper to that and parallel to meditation is the awareness that poetry is vocal speech, or language, of course, but language also rides out on breath.

  3. 25 de feb. de 2015 · Bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara, here depicted with thousand arms and eleven heads. AG: The next ( Bodhisattva vow) is “ Dharma gates are endless”. The gates of dharmas are endless, “I vow to enter every gate”, I vow to enter all. By “ dharma gate”, that means situations are infinite.

  4. 1 de ene. de 2023 · This Jack Kerouac School of Disembodied Poetics was co-founded by Allen Ginsberg and Anne Waldman. Ginsberg was a legendary poet and central figure of the Beat Generation who had shaken America with his epic poem “Howl,” first read in 1955 in San Francisco, with Jack Kerouac in the audience.

  5. 1 de ene. de 2023 · With more than 170 recordings of talks on a wide range of themes in the Naropa Collection, it can be hard to know where to begin! You could view this list of all the talks in the collection and see where serendipitous discovery takes you.

  6. Allen Ginsberg 19261997 From the time the word went out early Friday morning, April 4, that he had had a stroke and was in a coma, family, friends, lovers, poets, musicians, artists, and fellow Buddhists came to his loft on East Thirteenth Street to be with him in his final hours.

  7. Buddhism Beat & Square. One afternoon in 1953, a young poet named Allen Ginsberg visited the First Zen Institute which was then still housed in an elegant private uptown apartment in New York City. Ginsberg occupied himself by perusing the Zen paintings, records and books in the library.