Sneha Girap (Editor)

Franklin Rosemont

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Name
  
Franklin Rosemont

Awards
  
American Book Awards

Role
  
Poet


Franklin Rosemont foresthomecemeteryoverviewweeblycomuploads21

Died
  
April 12, 2009, Chicago, Illinois, United States

Books
  
Black - Brown & Beige: Surrealist, Joe Hill: The IWW & the Makin, Jacques Vaché and the roots, Revolution In The Service O, The Morning of a Machin

Similar People
  
David Roediger, Ron Sakolsky, Robin Kelley, Isadora Duncan, Mary Marcy

Organizations founded
  

Poem for Franklin Rosemont (Live)


Franklin Rosemont (2 October 1943 – 12 April 2009) was an American poet, artist, historian, street speaker, and co-founder of the Chicago Surrealist Group. Over four decades, Franklin produced a body of work, of declarations, manifestos, poetry, collage, hidden histories, and other interventions intended to inspire a new generation of revolution, and became perhaps "the most productive scholar of labor and the left in the United States."

Contents

Kate Khatib and David Roediger on Franklin Rosemont's Joe Hill


Early life

He was born in Chicago, Illinois, to Henry, a typographer and labor activist, and Sally, a jazz musician. He dropped out of high school but was admitted to Roosevelt University in Chicago in 1962, studying under African-American scholar St. Clair Drake.

Career

He edited and wrote an introduction for What is Surrealism?: Selected Writings of André Breton, and edited Rebel Worker, Arsenal/Surrealist Subversion, The Rise & Fall of the DIL Pickle: Jazz-Age Chicago's Wildest & Most Outrageously Creative Hobohemian Nightspot and Juice Is Stranger Than Friction: Selected Writings of T-Bone Slim. With his wife Penelope Rosemont, hersef the author and editor of several books and active in the Chicago Surrealists, and poet and storyteller Paul Garon, he edited The Forecast is Hot!. His work has been deeply concerned with both the history of surrealism (writing a forward for Max Ernst and Alchemy: A Magician in Search of Myth) and of the radical labor movement in America, for instance, writing a biography of Joe Hill. According to PoetrySoup.com Franklin Rosemont "became perhaps "the most productive scholar of labor and the left in the United States."

Publications

Rosemont is the author of the poetry collections The Morning of a Machine Gun: Twenty Poems & Documents. Profusely Illustrated By the Author, The Apple of the Automatic Zebra's Eye, and Penelope: A Poem, as well as An Open Entrance to the Shut Palace of Wrong Numbers, a book that explores the phenomenon of "wrong numbers" from a surrealist perspective, which was published by Black Swan Press in 2003. He also edited and introduced Hobohemia: Emma Goldman, Lucy Parsons, Ben Reitman & other agitators & outsiders in 1920s/30s Chicago, by Frank O. Beck.

Rosemont, Franklin (2002). Joe Hill. Chicago: Charles H. Kerr Publishing Company. ISBN 0-88286-265-0. 

In 1990 he published a collected edition of short stories by the socialist utopian author Edward Bellamy, titled Apparitions of Things to Come. He is co-editor, with Archie Green, David Roediger, and Salvatore Salerno, of The Big Red Songbook (Chicago: Charles H. Kerr, 2007).

References

Franklin Rosemont Wikipedia