Joffre Stewart
Joffre Stewart (born 1925) is an American poet, anarchist and pacifist known for his early participation in the early Beat movement.[1] Stewart is based in Chicago; he is mentioned in Allen Ginsberg's Howl.
Stewart's book, Poems and Poetry, was published by the Every Now and Then Publishing Cooperative in 1982. Stewart received a B.A. from Roosevelt University in 1952.
Stewart is known for his anarchist politics, his long-time participation in the North American anarchist movement, including his involvement in the Industrial Workers of the World and Chicago Area War Resisters Support Group, and was a regular contributor to the Bulletin of the Social Revolutionary Anarchist Federation (SRAF).
On April 29, 1994, Stewart was arrested while trying to attend a poetry reading at the Barnes & Noble bookstore in downtown Evanston, Illinois, after being mistaken for a vagrant, and spent 11 days in jail.[1]
References
- 1 2 Ben Joravsky (July 7, 1994). "Poetic Injustice: the arrest and imprisonment of Joffre Stewart". Chicago Reader.
External links
- Poems by Stewart
- 2000 Interview with Joffre Stewart
- A photograph of Joffre Stewart
- CSC Oral History Research Program papers