Elise Cowen
Elise Cowen | |
---|---|
Elise Cowen (right) with Allen Ginsberg | |
Born |
Elise Nada Cowen July 31, 1933 Washington Heights, Manhattan, New York, U.S. |
Died |
February 27, 1962 28) Washington Heights, Manhattan, New York, U.S. | (aged
Occupation | Poet, writer |
Nationality | American |
Alma mater | Barnard College |
Literary movement | Beat literature |
Elise Nada Cowen (July 31, 1933 – February 27, 1962,[1] Washington Heights, Manhattan) was an American poet. She was part of the Beat generation, and was close to Allen Ginsberg, one of the movement's leading figures.
Background
Born to a middle class Jewish family in Washington Heights, New York, Cowen wrote poetry from a young age, influenced by the works of Emily Dickinson, T. S. Eliot, Ezra Pound, and Dylan Thomas.
While attending Barnard College in the early 1950s, she became friends with Joyce Johnson (at the time, Joyce Glassman). It was during this period that she was introduced to Ginsberg by psychology professor Donald Cook. The two discovered a mutual acquaintance in Carl Solomon, whom they had both met while spending time separately in a mental hospital. A romantic involvement followed in the spring and summer of 1953. However, within a year, Ginsberg would meet and fall in love with Peter Orlovsky, his eventual life partner. Despite this, Cowen remained emotionally attached to Ginsberg for the rest of her life.[2]
In February 1956, she and her lover Sheila (a pseudonym) moved into an apartment with Ginsberg and Orlovsky. At the time Cowen had a job as a typist. She was fired and was removed from the office by the police. She later told her close friend Leo Skir that one of the officers hit her in the stomach. When informed she had been arrested, her father said, "This will kill your mother." She then moved to San Francisco, attracted by its growing Beat scene. While in San Francisco, Cowen became pregnant and underwent a hysterotomy during a late-stage abortion. She returned to New York, and after another trip to California, she relocated to live in Manhattan.
Death and posthumous publication
A lifelong depressive, Cowen began to be afflicted by increasingly severe psychological breakdowns, eventually being admitted to Bellevue Hospital in order to obtain treatment for hepatitis and psychosis. She checked herself out against doctors' orders and returned to her parents' apartment on Bennett Avenue under the guise that she was going to go on vacation with her parents to Miami Beach. At her parents' home she committed suicide, jumping through the locked living room window and falling seven stories to the ground.[3]
A volume of work from her only surviving notebook, titled Elise Cowen: Poems and Fragments, edited by Tony Trigilio, is forthcoming in 2014 from Ahsahta Press. Fourteen of Cowen’s shorter poems are included in the "Short Poem Dossier" of the 2012 issue of Court Green (edited by Trigilio and David Trinidad). These two publications represent the first time Cowen’s work has been reprinted with the authorization of the copyright owners, her estate, the Heirs of Elise Cowen.
After her death, the bulk of her writings was destroyed by her parents’ neighbors — as a favor to the parents, who were uneasy with Cowen’s representations of sexuality and drug use in the poems. However, Leo Skir, a close friend, had 83 of her poems in his possession at the time of her death, and saw to the publication of several in prominent literary journals of the mid-1960s, including City Lights Journal; El Corno Emplumado; Fuck You, A Magazine of the Arts; The Ladder; and Things. A short biography and several of her poems are included in Women of the Beat Generation: Writers, Artists and Muses at the Heart of a Revolution, edited by Brenda Knight. Several of her poems also appear in A Different Beat: Writings by Women of the Beat Generation, edited by Richard Peabody. Cowen features prominently in Joyce Johnson's memoir, Minor Characters and in Johnson’s novel (as the character Kay), Come and Join the Dance.
References
- ↑ Cowen's birth and death dates have been misreported in a number of print and online sources. These are the definitive dates, however. Cowen's family records confirm that her date of birth was July 31, 1933. This date also appears in her contributor's note in the journal Things, which posthumously published four of her poems in its Fall 1964 issue. The source for the date of her death, February 27, 1962, is the brief report, "Woman Found Dead," from the New York World Telegram and Sun (27 Feb. 1962), p. 2.
- ↑ Trigilio, Tony. "Who Writes? Reading Elise Cowen's Poetry." Girls Who Wore Black: Women Writing the Beat Generation (ed. Ronna C. Johnson and Nancy M. Grace). Rutgers University Press, 2002, p. 119-140.
- ↑ Leo Skir, "Elise Cowen: A Brief Memoir of the Fifties." A Different Beat: Writings by Women of the Beat Generation (ed. Richard Peabody). London: High Risk Books, 1997, p. 33-45. See also "Woman Found Dead." New York World Telegram and Sun (27 Feb. 1962), p. 2.