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John Suiter papers

 Collection
Identifier: UUS_COLL MSS 480

Scope and Contents

Series I contains materials related to John Suiter’s early work documenting and photo-graphing the “literary landscapes” of Jack Kerouac in Lowell, Massachusetts, and Mexico.

Series II contains materials collected and produced by John Suiter for his book Poets on the Peaks: Gary Snyder, Philip Whalen and Jack Kerouac in the Cascades , published in 2002 by Counterpoint Press. Primary research materials in this series include Suiter’s correspondence with various persons, including his editors and publisher at Counterpoint; his working notebooks and journals from the period; audiotapes and typed transcripts of interviews with persons of interest to the work, including poets Gary Snyder, Philip Whalen, Michael McClure, Philip Lamantia, and Joanne Kyger; drafts and proofs of the book, many with marginal notes by Gary Snyder and other poets; post-publication reviews, and events promoting the book. Also included are related articles and photographs by John Suiter in various periodicals during the period of working on Poets on the Peaks.

In the Special Collections and Archives at Reed College in 2007, during the course of his research on Gary Snyder’s life, Mr. Suiter identified a previously unknown 1956 recording of Allen Ginsberg reading his iconic poem, “Howl.” Seven other early Ginsberg poems are on the tape. In 2008, Mr. Suiter published an article on his discovery in Reed magazine, providing evidence that the audiotape contained the earliest-known recording of Ginsberg reading “Howl.” Later that year, Suiter published another article on a previously missing companion audiotape of Gary Snyder reading his poems on the same night. That audiotape surfaced in Portland, Oregon, after news reports of the “Howl” discovery. The Snyder tape is the earliest known recording of Gary Snyder reading, and contains 46 poems. Box 1, Folders 1-6 contain correspondence related to the Reed magazine articles on Ginsberg and Snyder. Also included are Suiter’s detailed reports on each poem on the tapes, indicating variations between the sound recordings and published versions of both Ginsberg’s and Snyder’s poems.

Dates

  • 1990-2009

Language of Materials

Material in English

Conditions Governing Access

The audio recordings contained in Series II cannot be reproduced for distribution to patrons. It is the responsibility of the researcher to obtain any necessary copyright clearances. Not available through interlibrary loan.

Conditions Governing Use

It is the responsibility of the researcher to obtain any necessary copyright clearances.

Permission to publish material from the John Suiter papers must be obtained from the Special Collections Manuscript Curator and/or the Special Collections Department Head.

Biographical Note

Writer-Photographer John Suiter was born and spent his early years in the Philadelphia area. He attended Syracuse University from 1965-1968. In the late 1960s and early 1970s he traveled around the United States, writing freelance articles for underground newspapers such as the Berkeley Barb, the Madison Kaleidoscope, the Syracuse Nickel Review, and The Black Panther. He eventually earned a B.A. in American Literature and Creative Writing from Syracuse University in 1973. For several years in the mid-1970s and early 80s he worked as a bookseller.

In the mid-1980s, Suiter attended the Art Institute of Boston and the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, where he studied to become a photographer. He began doing free-lance assignment photography work for magazines in the Boston area in 1988. In 1989 he published his first photo-essay entitled, “Kerouac’s Lowell”—a ten-image exploration of the literary landscape of Lowell, Massachusetts, hometown of beat writer Jack Kerouac. This photo-essay, published in Bostonia magazine, earned him a culture grant from the Department of the Interior to create an exhibit of Kerouac-related images for Lowell’s Preservation Commission. “Rumours of Kerouac”, opened at the James McNeil Whistler House in Lowell and the Boott Gallery at the Lowell National Historical Park in 1993.

In 1994 and ’95, Suiter traveled to Mexico, following the route described by Jack Kerouac in On the Road and Visions of Cody. Photographs from these trips were included in the 1994 group exhibit “Beat Art: Visual Works by and about the Beat Generation” at New York University, and in the award-winning A Jack Kerouac CD-ROMnibus, an early digital multi-media project. Suiter was Associate Producer on that production.

Also in 1995, Suiter added to his Kerouac-related portfolio with pictures from Desolation Lookout in Washington state—the fire-watch cabin that provides the setting for the culminating chapters of Kerouac’s novel, The Dharma Bums. Suiter stayed at Desolation Lookout as a volunteer fire-watcher in the summer of 1995. The photographs he made during that time were later exhibited at the Visitors’ Center of the North Cascades National Park in Newhalem, Washington, and, in subsequent years, at numerous other galleries.

With his experience at Desolation Lookout, Suiter began the transition from being strictly a photographer to a photographer-writer. His first published writing (since 1970) was a 1996 article about Kerouac’s sojourn on Desolation Peak for The Independent in London. In 1997 and ’98 Suiter returned to the North Cacades, expanding his Kerouac project to include Kerouac’s fellow poets Gary Snyder and Philip Whalen. [It was Snyder who encouraged Kerouac to apply for a fire lookout job in 1956 and was the life model for Kerouac’s character “Japhy Ryder” in The Dharma Bums]. In 1997, Suiter met and interviewed Gary Snyder and Philip Whalen. After a series of photo-essays, interviews, and correspondence with them, and other San Francisco poets, Suiter published Poets on the Peaks: Gary Snyder, Philip Whalen and Jack Kerouac in the North Cascades. [Counterpoint Press, 2002]. This book led in turn to Counterpoint contracting Suiter to write the first full-length biography of Gary Snyder, a long-term project on which Suiter is still at work at this writing (2014).

From 1997 to 2006 he taught documentary photography and digital imaging at the New England School of Photography and the Art Institute of Boston. In 2006, Suiter was invited to Logan to present at Utah State University’s Tanner Symposium, “The 1950s, the Beat Generation, and the Power of Expression.” In 2007, the university began acquiring Suiter’s photographs and research materials. Suiter’s photographic prints and negatives from that project are in the John Suiter Photograph Collection: USU_P0375.

Extent

5.5 linear feet (12)

Immediate Source of Acquisition

These materials were purchased from John Suiter by Special Collections and Archives in 2010.

Related Materials

John Suiter Photography Collection, P0375.

Bibliography

Processing Information

Processed in April of 2014

Title
Guide to the John Suiter papers 1990-2009
Author
Finding aid/Register created by Andrew Izatt, Clint Pumphrey
Date
©2014
Description rules
Finding Aid Based On Dacs (Describing Archives: A Content Standard)
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin
Language of description note
Finding aid encoded in English .

Revision Statements

  • 2009: Template information was updated to reflect Archives West best practice guidelines.

Repository Details

Part of the Utah State University, Merrill-Cazier Library, Special Collections & Archives Repository

Contact:
Merrill-Cazier Library
Utah State University
3000 Old Main Hill
Logan Utah 84322-3000 United States
435 797-8248
435 797-2880 (Fax)