{"id":2761,"date":"2010-06-14T16:35:32","date_gmt":"2010-06-14T16:35:32","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.thevillagetrip.com\/?p=2761"},"modified":"2022-09-10T07:18:03","modified_gmt":"2022-09-10T11:18:03","slug":"resource-links","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.thevillagetrip.com\/resource-links\/","title":{"rendered":"The Village Trip Resource Links"},"content":{"rendered":"
Last call, Bohemia<\/a><\/p>\n You say you want a revolution: reimagining Greenwich Village<\/a><\/p>\n Now more than ever, the republic of the Village<\/a><\/p>\n Still Positively 4th Street<\/a><\/p>\n A Village eccentric\u2019s popular 1920s\u00a0speakeasy<\/a><\/p>\n When the Village broke free<\/a><\/p>\n Greenwich Village, when it was green and a Village<\/a><\/p>\n Greenwich Village: past and present<\/a><\/p>\n Romany Marie\u2019s bohemian cafes in the Village<\/a><\/p>\n Mable Dodge\u2019s bohemian salons in the Village<\/a><\/p>\n The old house at home<\/a><\/p>\n An enclave for artists: a brief history of Greenwich Village<\/a><\/p>\n Community Cornerstone: Little Red School House – Elisabeth Irwin High School<\/a><\/p>\n The Vault at Pfaff\u2019s: Greenwich Village\u2019s First Bohemian\u00a0Hangout<\/a><\/p>\n The Downtown Den Where Walt Whitman and America\u2019s First Bohemians Met<\/a><\/p>\n Village Bohemians<\/a><\/p>\n A valentine for Max Eastman<\/a><\/p>\n John Reed, romantic revolutionary<\/a><\/p>\n Warren Beatty\u2019s \u2018Reds\u2019: a long, long movie about a communist who died<\/a><\/p>\n Experiencing the Community: Eugene O’Neill’s ambivalent response to Bohemian Utopia<\/a><\/p>\n Emma Goldman: a thoroughly modern anarchist<\/a><\/p>\n A saint for difficult people<\/a><\/p>\n The remarkable women of Washington Square<\/a><\/p>\n Nat Hentoff, the free-thinking quick-change artist of the Village Voice<\/a><\/p>\n Dylan Thomas’ Fatal Tour in Greenwich Village<\/a><\/p>\n Suze Rotolo in the early 1960s and Bob Dylan in the late 1970s<\/a><\/p>\n Walt Whitman\u2019s Bohemian Village<\/a><\/p>\n Something rhymed: Mabel Dodge and Gertrude Stein (and Alice B\u00a0Toklas)<\/a><\/p>\n The Arch Conspirators<\/a><\/p>\n Bella Abzug<\/a><\/p>\n <\/p>\n In the pandemic present, a literary tour of Greenwich Village\u2019s past<\/a><\/p>\n Henry James and Washington Square<\/a><\/p>\n Give me your tired, your poor: the story of poet and refugee advocate Emma Lazarus<\/a><\/p>\n Millay\u2019s poetry in a Greenwich Village context<\/a><\/p>\n Hustler with a lyric voice<\/a><\/p>\n The rebellion of e e cummings<\/a><\/p>\n The haunts of Miss Highsmith<\/a><\/p>\n An Interview with the Greenwich Village poet and hellraiser Brigid Murnaghan<\/a><\/p>\n Jack Kerouac\u2019s New York<\/a><\/p>\n Remembering Jack Kerouac<\/a><\/p>\n Remembering James Baldwin<\/a><\/p>\n It took a Village<\/a><\/p>\n A Maeve Brennan revival?<\/a><\/p>\n Bob Dylan, the Beat Generation and Allen Ginsberg\u2019s America<\/a><\/p>\n <\/p>\n Greenwich Village: The birthplace of modern American drama<\/a><\/p>\n Greenwich Village: The birthplace of modern American drama, part 2<\/a><\/p>\n The birth of the Provincetown Playhouse<\/a><\/p>\n Swept away by a dark current: the plays of Eugene O\u2019Neill<\/a><\/p>\n The gay coffeehouse where Off-Off-Broadway was born<\/a><\/p>\n Edward Albee: the art of theatre<\/a><\/p>\n The little theatre that could<\/a><\/p>\n The Master of the Method plays a role himself<\/a><\/p>\n How George Carlin changed comedy<\/a><\/p>\n Lenny Bruce everywhere<\/a><\/p>\n Six decades of stand-up that show Joan Rivers\u2019 enduring genius<\/a><\/p>\n The rebellion of e e cummings<\/a><\/p>\n <\/p>\n How the 60s New York dance scene revolutionised dance<\/a><\/p>\n Isadora Duncan<\/a><\/p>\n Isadora<\/a><\/p>\n Martha Graham\u2019s life as an artful innovator of dance<\/a><\/p>\n Edgard Varese: in wait for the future<\/a><\/p>\n Searching for silence: John Cage\u2019s art of noise<\/a><\/p>\n This land is his land<\/a><\/p>\n Pete Seeger\u2019s New York roots<\/a><\/p>\n Folk City: New York and the American folk music revival<\/a><\/p>\n Folk music in Greenwich Village, 1940s-1953<\/a><\/p>\n 1940s folkie commune on West 10th Street<\/a><\/p>\n Bob Dylan, the wanderer<\/a><\/p>\n Ornette\u2019s permanent revolution<\/a><\/p>\n The 1962 Miles Davis Playboy Interview<\/a><\/p>\n An argument with instruments: on Charles Mingus<\/a><\/p>\n Charlies Parker \u2013 Bird lives!<\/a><\/p>\n Breakfast with Bill Evans<\/a><\/p>\n John Coltrane \u2013 giant steps<\/a><\/p>\n Live at Caf\u00e9 Bohemia: hardbop in the heart of Greenwich Village<\/a><\/p>\n Nick\u2019s Tavern, the jazz join that went down swinging<\/a><\/p>\n Downtown, you\u2019re legendary \u2013 the Village Vanguard at 80<\/a><\/p>\n The Village Vanguard: a hallowed basement<\/a><\/p>\n Caf\u00e9 Society: the wrong place for the right people<\/a><\/p>\n The story of the Gaslight Cafe<\/a><\/p>\n Last of the Mad Ones \u2013 David Amram<\/a><\/p>\n Now\u2019s The Time: An Interview with David Amram<\/a><\/p>\n St Joan \u2013 Joan Baez<\/a><\/p>\n Ol\u2019 Blue Eyes is Back \u2013 Judy Collins<\/a><\/p>\n <\/p>\n Edward Hopper\u2019s Greenwich Village: the real-life inspirations behind his paintings<\/a><\/p>\n It takes a Village: Jackson Pollock\u2019s loner legacy reconsidered<\/a><\/p>\n Jane Jacobs v Robert Moses, battle of New York\u2019s urban titans<\/a><\/p>\n The woman who saved old New York<\/a><\/p>\n The hidden charms of the far West Village<\/a><\/p>\n Art studios where Whitney was born will admit visitors<\/a><\/p>\n Gloria Vanderbilt Whitney: advocate for the American artist<\/a><\/p>\n The Velvet Underground and Andy Warhol in Greenwich Village<\/a><\/p>\n <\/p>\n Triangle fire: one woman who changed the rules<\/a><\/p>\n From Greenwich Village to the nation \u2013 leading the push for women\u2019s rights<\/a><\/p>\n Margaret Sanger and the struggle for women\u2019s rights<\/a><\/p>\n A progressive centennial: Margaret Sanger\u2019s 1916 clinic<\/a><\/p>\n The feminist city<\/a><\/p>\n Lorraine Hansbury\u2019s Greenwich Village: from \u2018A Raisin in the Sun\u2019 to civil rights<\/a><\/p>\n When the Village broke free<\/a><\/p>\n Before the Stonewall uprising, there was the \u2018Sip-In\u2019<\/a><\/p>\n <\/p>\n The Village: 400 Years of Beats and Bohemians, Radicals and Rogues, a History of Greenwich Village<\/em><\/a>, John Strausbaugh<\/p>\n Republic of Dreams: Greenwich Village: The American Bohemia, 1910-1960<\/em><\/a>, Ross Wetzsteon <\/em><\/p>\n Greenwich Village Stories: A Collection of Memories<\/a>,<\/em> Judith Stonehill<\/p>\n Greenwich Village<\/em><\/a>, Anita Dickhuth<\/p>\n Around Washington Square: An Illustrated History of Greenwich Village<\/em><\/a>, Luther S Harris<\/p>\n It Happened on Washington Square<\/em><\/a>, Emily, Kies, Folpe<\/p>\n Greenwich Village: A Guide to America’s Legendary Left Bank<\/em><\/a>, Judith Stonehill<\/p>\n Greenwich Village And How It Got That Way<\/em><\/a>,<\/em> Terry Miller<\/p>\n Inside Greenwich Village: A New York City Neighborhood, 1898-1918<\/em><\/a>, Gerald W McFarland<\/p>\n Greenwich Village, 1913: Suffrage, Labor, and the New Woman<\/em><\/a>, Mary Jane Treacy<\/p>\n The Improper Bohemians: Greenwich Village in Its Heyday<\/em><\/a>Village People<\/h2>\n
Literature<\/h2>\n
Theatre & Cabaret<\/h2>\n
Music & Dance<\/h2>\n
Art & Architecture<\/h2>\n
Social Justice<\/h2>\n
Select Bibliography<\/h2>\n