Samuel Roth

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Samuel Roth (1893 - 1974) was an American publisher and writer.

In the late 1920s, he published an unauthorized version of Ulysses by James Joyce in the United States which led to him being thrown in jail because what he published was considered to be obscene material. Joyce later secured a court injunction preventing Roth from the unauthorized use of his work.

Roth also published sections of Joyce's Work in Progress, later known as Finnegans Wake, and material by D.H. Lawrence and Thomas Hardy in his Two Worlds quarterly, also without the authors' permission.

In 1934, he wrote the anti-Semitic Jews Must Live which blamed his fellow Jews for his failures in business. By this time, he had been to jail three times. He served another prison term from 1936 to 1939.

In 1955, he was prosecuted for sending obscene material through the mail. In Roth v. United States (1957), which upheld Roth's conviction, the United States Supreme Court found that although obscene material was not protected by the First Amendment, art, literature and scientific research were protected, even if they had sexual content. Roth served five more years in prison as a result of his conviction.