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David Henderson (poet) : ウィキペディア英語版
David Henderson (poet)
David Henderson (born 1942) is an American writer and poet. Henderson was a founder of the Black Arts Movement in the 1960s. He has been an active member of New York’s Lower East Side art community for more than 40 years. His work has appeared in many literary publications and anthologies, and he has published four volumes of his own poetry. He is most known for his highly acclaimed biography of rock guitarist, Jimi Hendrix, which he revised and expanded for a second edition that was published in 2009.
==Life and Work==

David Henderson was born in 1942 in Harlem, New York. He was raised in Harlem, and attended Bronx Community College, Hunter College, and the New School for Social Research. Henderson studied writing, communications, and Eastern cultures without ever completing a degree. His first published poem appeared in the New York newsweekly ''Black American'' in 1960. Henderson became active in the many Black nationalist, arts, and anti-war movements upon moving to the Lower East Side of New York.
Along with other black writers, Henderson founded the Society of Umbra in 1962.
Henderson worked with the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Free Southern Theatre in New Orleans, and the Teachers and Writers Collaborative at Columbia University. He was poet-in-resident and taught at City College of New York. In the late 60's and 70's, he served on the board of directors of the University Without Walls in Berkeley and as artistic consultant to the Berkeley Public Schools while living in California. He also taught English and Afro-American literature at the University of California at Berkeley and San Diego. Later, he taught courses, seminars, and workshops at Long Island University, New York's New School and St. Mark's Poetry Project.
Henderson's poetry has been included in numerous anthologies, including two that were edited by Langston Hughes. He has also contributed to many periodicals including ''Black American Literature Forum'', ''Black Scholar'', ''Essence'', ''Paris Review'', ''New American Review'', ''Saturday Review'', and ''The New York Times''.
Henderson spent over five years researching, interviewing, and writing ''Jimi Hendrix: Voodoo Child of the Aquarian Age'', which was originally published in 1978. It was condensed and revised as '''Scuse Me While I Kiss the Sky'' in 1981. An expanded and revised edition was published in 2009 as '''Scuse Me While I Kiss the Sky -- Jimi Hendrix, Voodoo Child''.

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