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Judson Crews

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Nationality
  
American

Education
  
Baylor University

Role
  
Poet

Name
  
Judson Crews

Years active
  
1946 – 2010


Born
  
June 30, 1917 Waco, Texas, U.S. (
1917-06-30
)

Occupation
  
Poet, bookseller, publisher, educator

Literary movement
  
Southwest Poetry, U.S.A.

Died
  
May 17, 2010, Taos, New Mexico, United States

Books
  
The Noose: A Retrospective : 4 Decades

The Discombobulation of Art - a Sonnet from All of Love


Judson Crews (June 30, 1917 – May 17, 2010) was an American poet, bookseller and small press publisher.

Crews was born and raised in Waco, Texas. He first opened his Motive Bookshop and issued his first Motive Press publications in Waco. In 1947 he moved both concerns to Taos, New Mexico and married Taos photographer Mildred Tolbert. In addition to writing poetry, his activities in Taos over several decades included editing the poetry magazines Suck-egg Mule, The Deer and Dachshund, The Flying Fish, Motive, Vers Libre, Poetry Taos and The Naked Ear (which published poetry by Robert Creeley, Charles Bukowski, Kenneth L. Beaudoin, Stuart Z. Perkoff, Vincent Ferrini, Larry Eigner, LeRoi Jones (Amiri Baraka), Jack Anderson and Diane Di Prima, among others); and issuing chapbooks of his own poetry and poetry by his friends Wendell Anderson and Carol Bergé. Crews was a frequent contributor to Poetry Magazine, among many other literary journals. Besides operating his bookshop and press, he worked in newspaper production, as a teacher (including as a lecturer at the University of Zambia, 1974–1978), and as a social worker and counselor, until his retirement. He died on May 17, 2010 in Taos, NM and is buried in Tres Orejas, NM.

His daughters are artist and author Carole Crews, and photographer Anna Bush Crews.

Crews wrote and published under a number of pseudonyms, including Cerise Farallon, Willard Emory Betis, Trumbull Drachler, Tobi Macadams and Charley John Greasybear. Although he denied it, many in his literary circle believe that "Mason Jordan Mason"—a widely published and anthologized African American poet of the 1950s and 60s, recognized by the likes of Amiri Baraka (LeRoi Jones) and Langston Hughes—was another of Crews's carefully constructed literary personae.

A long-time proponent of the work of his friend Henry Miller (a reprint of Miller's Maurizius Forever was one of Motive Press's earliest publications), Crews was a lifelong activist against censorship in publishing. Crews lived with Miller briefly during his Big Sur, California days.

Much of his own output as an independent, small press publisher consisted of short-run, inexpensively produced literary chapbooks and magazines, making him a notable figure in the 1960s-70s movement known as the Mimeo Revolution.

References

Judson Crews Wikipedia


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