Genealogie Wylie » William Seward Burroughs II [K] (1914-1997)

Persönliche Daten William Seward Burroughs II [K] 


Familie von William Seward Burroughs II [K]

(1) Er ist verheiratet mit Ilse Hersfeld Klapper.

Sie haben geheiratet am 1938 or-07-1937 in New York City, New York, er war 23 Jahre alt.


(2) Er hat eine Beziehung mit Joan Vollmer.


Kind(er):

  1. (Nicht öffentlich)


Notizen bei William Seward Burroughs II [K]

The CASWELLS of Virginia
Entries: 29207 Updated: Sat Aug 25 15:47:56 2001 Contact: Mike Caswell
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ID: I14135
Name: William Seward BURROUGHS
Sex: M
Birth: 16 Feb 1914 in St Louis, Missouri
Death: 1997 in Lawrence, Kansas

Father: Mortimer P BURROUGHS b: 16 Jun 1885 in St Louis, Missouri
Mother: Laura Hammond LEE b: 6 Aug 1888 in Atlanta, Georgia

Marriage 1 Joan VOLLMER b: 1924 in Loudonville, New York
Children
William S BURROUGHS b: 21 Jul 1947 in New Waverly, Texas

Marriage 2 Ilse KLAPPER b: in Dubrovnik, Yugoslavia
Married: Jul 1937 in New York City, New York

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
RootsWeb is funded and supported by Ancestry.com and our loyal RootsWeb community. Learn more.
About Us | Contact Us | Acceptable Use Policy | PRIVACY STATEMENT | Copyright
Copyright © 1998-2005, MyFamily.com Inc. and its subsidiaries.

Haben Sie Ergänzungen, Korrekturen oder Fragen im Zusammenhang mit William Seward Burroughs II [K]?
Der Autor dieser Publikation würde gerne von Ihnen hören!


Zeitbalken William Seward Burroughs II [K]

  Diese Funktionalität ist Browsern mit aktivierten Javascript vorbehalten.
Klicken Sie auf den Namen für weitere Informationen. Verwendete Symbole: grootouders Großeltern   ouders Eltern   broers-zussen Geschwister   kinderen Kinder

Vorfahren (und Nachkommen) von William Seward Burroughs

William Seward Burroughs
1914-1997

(1) 1937
(2) 

Joan Vollmer
1924-1951


Mit der Schnellsuche können Sie nach Name, Vorname gefolgt von Nachname suchen. Sie geben ein paar Buchstaben (mindestens 3) ein und schon erscheint eine Liste mit Personennamen in dieser Publikation. Je mehr Buchstaben Sie eingeben, desto genauer sind die Resultate. Klicken Sie auf den Namen einer Person, um zur Seite dieser Person zu gelangen.

  • Kleine oder grosse Zeichen sind egal.
  • Wenn Sie sich bezüglich des Vornamens oder der genauen Schreibweise nicht sicher sind, können Sie ein Sternchen (*) verwenden. Beispiel: „*ornelis de b*r“ findet sowohl „cornelis de boer“ als auch „kornelis de buur“.
  • Es ist nicht möglich, nichtalphabetische Zeichen einzugeben, also auch keine diakritischen Zeichen wie ö und é.

Quellen

  1. New York Times, 21. Februar 2014


    King of Cool

    ‘Call Me Burroughs,’ by Barry Miles


    By ANN DOUGLASFEB. 21, 2014





    Launch media viewer

    Tangier, 1961: Standing, from left, William S. Burroughs, Allen Ginsberg, Alan Ansen, Gregory Corso and Ian Sommerville; sitting, Peter Orlovsky, left, and Paul Bowles. Allen Ginsberg/Corbis






    email


    facebook


    twitter


    save


    more




    William S. Burroughs “didn’t say anything for shock value,” his student Sam Kashner once observed. “His life had shock value.”

    Born to a prominent St. Louis family in 1914, Burroughs linked his lineage at every point to the fatal plotlines of American hubris and power. His mother’s family had been slave owners in the antebellum South; his paternal grandfather invented the adding machine, a building block in the embryonic military-­industrial-media complex. His uncle Ivy Lee, a pioneer of public relations, counted Hitler’s regime among his preferred clients. Burroughs himself spent time in Vienna in the 1930s and learned a lesson he never forgot: Everything Hitler did was legal. Laws could spur, not deter, the blackest of crimes. To top it off, young Bill had also attended the Los Alamos Ranch School in New Mexico, which in 1943 would be co-opted for the Manhattan Project. “The sick soul, sick unto death, of the atomic age” became his great subject.

    Burroughs graduated from Harvard in 1936, and never again did anything that was expected of him. Thanks to the allowance his parents provided until he was 50, his short-term jobs (notably as a detective and an exterminator) doubled as research into his real occupations: gay sex, hard drugs and avant-garde writing.

    In “Call Me Burroughs,” his authoritative new biography, Barry Miles avoids unduly romanticizing Burroughs’s outlaw status. Even Burroughs, the proud progenitor of what some called gay pornography, was not immune to the homophobia he defied; as late as 1957, he referred to homosexuality as a “horrible sickness,” though he had no serious wish for a cure. Nor, wisely, does Miles minimize the depth and tenacity of Burroughs’s addictions. He wrote all of his books under the influence of drugs — principally heroin, alcohol, marijuana and methadone. Miles’s book is emphatically not, however, the familiar story of a gifted writer’s substance-­soaked decline, probably for the simple reason that Burroughs’s genius for surreal black comedy tempered with hard, practical thought never deserted him. Though he chronicled all its horrors and tried various treatment programs, Burroughs in some real sense chose addiction; it was his entree to the street slang and chronic desperation of the noir lifers who occupied his fiction from “Junkie” (1953) on. When he died at 83 in 1997, his friends reportedly tucked some heroin and marijuana along with his .38 into his coffin.


    Hailed after the publication of “Naked Lunch” in 1959 as an avatar of postmodernism, Burroughs publicly matched wits with Michel Foucault and Jean Genet, dourly graced the cover of “Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band” and managed his reputation as the cryptic “godfather of punk.” The best way to get to the top in America, he freely acknowledged, is to be born there. If few of his honors were sought, none were refused. “Keep your snout in the public trough,” was a Burroughs maxim. It’s a prankster’s planet, and Burroughs was in on the joke.

    Miles also charts in detail how dependent this singular iconoclast was on the inspiration and editorial skills of his friends. Without Allen Ginsberg, who spent 10 weeks establishing some kind of order on the pages of “Naked Lunch,” scattered around the floor of Burroughs’s room in Tangier; without the painter Brion Gysin, who originated the “cut-up” method; and without James Grauerholz, Burroughs’s beloved companion, editor and literary executor, we wouldn’t have any of his major works in their present form. Though the first and last drafts were always his, collaboration rescued Burroughs from the terrors and falsities of single authorship, giving him access to kindred minds with different resources. He knew they made his work, as Ginsberg put it, more “decipherable.”


    ELSEWHERE ON NYTIMES.COM

    House hunting ... outside Paris


    The anti-McMansion
    What you get for... $900,000

    nytimes.comReal Estate





    Appropriately, this biography, as Miles is at pains to tell us, is itself a collaboration, resting on the monumental research Grauerholz did for a biography he abandoned in 2010, and the extensive taped interviews Ted Morgan conducted for “Literary Outlaw,” his pioneering 1988 biography. Miles himself knew Burroughs for many years; it was he who discovered the lost manuscripts of “Queer” (1985) and “Interzone” (1989), and he has written a number of books on the Beat Generation, including a fine biography of Ginsberg and an early study of Burroughs. Although he occasionally simplifies Burroughs’s story by superficial moralizing — endorsing at one point a psychiatrist’s diagnosis of Burroughs in 1949 as a “grossly immature” mama’s boy, terms then virtually synonymous, as Miles surely knows, with “homosexual” — his access and wealth of detail will make this the go-to biography for many years to come.

    In the most terrible and formative event of his adult life, on Sept. 6, 1951, Burroughs, a keen marksman, shot and killed his common-law wife, Joan, in a drunken game of William Tell. Burroughs never deceived Joan; she knew he preferred the “real uncut boy stuff,” but her patience seemed unhappily “infinite” (in her word), and his devotion was real and lifelong. Burroughs served only two weeks in jail; their son, Billy, then 4, was raised by Burroughs’s parents. Billy drank himself to death in 1981 at 33. Miles, like Billy himself, puts the blame squarely on Burroughs: “By killing the boy’s mother he had destroyed Billy’s life.” Delicate, funny and uncannily intelligent, Joan was also an alcoholic and drug addict who left Billy and Julie (her daughter by an earlier relationship) unbathed and without underwear or shoes; she toilet-trained them with the same Revere Ware she used for cooking. She was no more a fit parent than Burroughs. The crime, if there was one in this tragedy, was Burroughs’s veto of the abortion option. Ginsberg thought Joan used Bill to commit suicide, an opinion Burroughs never shared. All his intimate relationships had been “strained and off-key,” he told Ted Morgan, his “affection denied when needed.”

    Miles rightly finds Burroughs’s enduring literary significance in his high-wire reinvention of the picaresque. Abandoning the narrative connections by which the traditional novel grants its protagonist a coherence denied by life, he fashioned an art of paranoia and parody, half high-­modernist irony, half sci-fi cartoon, at once fantastic and literal. The cut-up method he adopted in the 1960s — taking scissors to chosen texts and juxtaposing the fragments into new sequences — was part of his decoding operation. Magic must counter magic to reroute power. At a literary conference in 1962, Burroughs told the audience he had once caused a plane crash by willing it. “Are you serious?” another writer asked incredulously. “Perfectly,” Burroughs answered with characteristic sangfroid. He never doubted that the sources of information on which his opponents relied were far more suspect than his own. “You are not paid off to be quiet about what you know,” he said. “You are paid not to find it out.”

    Though many of his fans were young, Burroughs was 45 when “Naked Lunch” was published; he finished his great trilogy, “Cities of the Red Night” (1981), “The Place of Dead Roads” (1984) and “The Western Lands” (1987), at 73, and he brought old age, impeccably tailored, with him into the spotlight. The most chic old man of letters since Tiresias roamed the Wasteland, Burroughs’s Wise Man persona mocked and countered the reputed “wise men” in Washington steering the country on what he considered its “suicidal and psychotic” course. For all its futurist élan, Burroughs’s work constitutes an extended elegy for a time before bureaucracy strangled the frontier, before rivers became poisoned sewers, before Melancholy Baby died “from an overdose of time.” In 1981, he moved back to the Midwest to be near Grauerholz, and discovered that Kansas, unlike Byzantium, was a country for old men. “Sky in all directions,” he noted in 1995, a fit home for a cosmonaut of terrestrial and extraterrestrial space.




    CALL ME BURROUGHS


    A Life

    By Barry Miles

    Illustrated. 718 pp. Twelve. $32.




    Ann Douglas teaches a course on the Beat Generation at Columbia University.

    A version of this review appears in print on February 23, 2014, on page BR17 of the Sunday Book Review with the headline: King of Cool. Order Reprints|Today's Paper|Subscribe

Anknüpfungspunkte in anderen Publikationen

Diese Person kommt auch in der Publikation vor:

Historische Ereignisse

  • Die Temperatur am 16. Februar 1914 lag zwischen 4,0 °C und 8,8 °C und war durchschnittlich 6,2 °C. Es gab 4,5 mm Niederschlag. Die durchschnittliche Windgeschwindigkeit war 3 Bft (mäßiger Wind) und kam überwiegend aus West-Süd-West. Quelle: KNMI
  • Koningin Wilhelmina (Huis van Oranje-Nassau) war von 1890 bis 1948 Fürst der Niederlande (auch Koninkrijk der Nederlanden genannt)
  • Von 29. August 1913 bis 9. September 1918 regierte in den Niederlanden das Kabinett Cort van der Linden mit Mr. P.W.A. Cort van der Linden (liberaal) als ersten Minister.
  • Im Jahr 1914: Quelle: Wikipedia
    • Die Niederlande hatte ungefähr 6,2 Millionen Einwohner.
    • 28. Juli » Einen Monat nach der Ermordung von Erzherzog Franz Ferdinand in Sarajewo erklärt Österreich-Ungarn Serbien den Krieg und beginnt damit den Ersten Weltkrieg.
    • 30. Juli » Zar Nikolaus II. befiehlt die Generalmobilmachung der russischen Armee und setzt damit die Aktivierung der Bündnisverpflichtungen in Gang, die in den Ersten Weltkrieg münden.
    • 28. August » Im Seegefecht bei Helgoland, dem ersten Seegefecht des Ersten Weltkriegs, versenken die Briten ohne eigene Schiffsverluste drei deutsche Kleine Kreuzer und ein Torpedoboot.
    • 29. September » In Deutsch-Südwestafrika endet die Schlacht bei Sandfontein mit der Kapitulation des britisch-südafrikanischen Verbandes gegenüber der deutschen Schutztruppe.
    • 18. November » Die Erste Flandernschlacht im Ersten Weltkrieg, die am 20. Oktober begonnen hat, wird beendet.
    • 24. Dezember » Etwa 100.000 Soldaten der West- und Ostfront des Ersten Weltkriegs legen ihre Waffen in einem unautorisierten Waffenstillstand nieder. Dieser Weihnachtsfrieden dauert einige Tage.


Gleicher Geburts-/Todestag

Quelle: Wikipedia


Über den Familiennamen Burroughs

  • Zeigen Sie die Informationen an, über die Genealogie Online verfügt über den Nachnamen Burroughs.
  • Überprüfen Sie die Informationen, die Open Archives hat über Burroughs.
  • Überprüfen Sie im Register Wie (onder)zoekt wie?, wer den Familiennamen Burroughs (unter)sucht.

Die Genealogie Wylie-Veröffentlichung wurde von erstellt.nimm Kontakt auf
Geben Sie beim Kopieren von Daten aus diesem Stammbaum bitte die Herkunft an:
Kin Mapper, "Genealogie Wylie", Datenbank, Genealogie Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/genealogie-wylie/I30082.php : abgerufen 19. Juni 2024), "William Seward Burroughs II [K] (1914-1997)".