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Stephen Morse

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Stephen Morse (born January 14, 1945, Oakland, California) is an American poet and publisher. He is sometimes referred to as the last living Oakland Side Beat poet[attribution needed], edited and published The White Elephant (5 editions 1970–1973), and Juice Magazine (7 editions 1974–1982). He was one of the original members of the Committee of Small Magazine Editors and Publishers (COSMEP), the organization most closely associated with the rise of the small press movement in the U.S. in the latter part of the 20th century. Morse was an activist publisher already when he joined COSMEP. Morse was already a poet of some local repute at that point, enabled by "the older San Francisco beats" to write any way he wanted, published in The Saturday Review, Anthology of College Writers and multiple small publications. A major influence, Bob Creeley, was an instructor at San Francisco State University in the 1970s, and met off campus with Morse and others to talk about poetry and writing poetry. Many of Morse's early contacts came from this gathering. Experimentation was and is a hallmark of Morse's poetry and the poets he published. Morse is currently an associate professor at Brown College in Mendota Heights, Minnesota, and co-edits Juice poetry magazine online with his wife, Minnesota poet Judy Brekke.

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Stephen Morse from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

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