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Holley Cantine

American writer and anarchist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Holley R. Cantine Jr. (February 14, 1916 – January 2, 1977) was an American writer and activist best known for publishing the anarchist periodical Retort with Dachine Rainer.

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Holley R. Cantine Jr.[1] was born on February 14, 1916,[2] and raised in Woodstock, New York. He came from a wealthy family.[3] His father owned a paper-coating business in Saugerties and his mother was a painter.[4] Cantine's maternal grandfather served as the first president of Panama and later became an ambassador for the United States. Woodstock was a growing, left-wing, artistic community during the time he was raised there.[3] Cantine studied anthropology at Swarthmore College and Columbia University but left before finishing his doctoral dissertation to pursue a self-sufficient life in the woods.[3]

Cantine edited the first issue of Retort, a journal of art and social philosophy, with Dorothy Paul in June 1942 from their small, self-built cabin in Bearsville, New York, near the town where he was raised.[5][3] Cantine published political writings alongside political poetry and fiction. Retort was an early publisher of writers Kenneth Patchen, Saul Bellow, and Robert Duncan.[3] By 1947, Cantine was editing alongside the anarchist poet Dachine Rainer and Retort has become "An Anarchist Quarterly".[5] Cantine set, printed, and bound the pages by hand.[3] The pair were jailed during World War II as conscientious objectors. They subsequently edited and published a collection of writings from conscientious objectors, Prison Etiquette, in 1950.[6] Retort ceased publication in 1951.[4]

He also wrote a weekly periodical, The Wasp, which took antagonistic aim at Woodstock tourists ("trudgers") and the town's commercialization.[7] His 1959 science fiction short story, "Double Double Toil and Trouble", received several awards. Cantine also translated Volin's The Unknown Revolution from French and his own Second Chance: A Story.[6]

Cantine died on January 2, 1977,[2] in a house fire in Woodstock.[8]

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