Mense Aprili 1947, Gleason primum Festum Poesis Modernae in Pinacotheca Luciani Labaudt in Via Gough ordinavit. Duos vesperosduodecim poetas, inter quos Rexroth, Robertus Duncan, et Spicer fuerunt, ad auditores in poetis iuvenibus et amantes poesis attulit. Haec fuit prima agnitio publica varietatis usuum poeticorum experimentalium quae in urbe vigebat.
Anthologia Alleniana fuit maximi momenti in definitione poeticae et latioris culturae dynamicae certi temporis historici, quod nunc Renasacentia Franciscopolis appellatur. Quamquam certa "aetas" nunc nominata erat (partim ob anthologiam Alleniamam), disceptatio de usu vocabuliRenascentia Franciscopolis ut pittacium definitionis temporis vel aetatis omnis hodie persistit.
Inter criticos vocabulorum et eos qui audent rogare quomodo et cur interrogatio conscientiam efficere potest, fortasse Ronaldus Silliman dilucidissimus fuit: "Renascentia Franciscopolis est grex qui, ut antea asserui, plerumque fictio ex necessitate creata est ut Allen suam materiam ordinaret."[4][5]
Nonnulli compositores aetatis rock circa 1965 et post scriptores sicut Kerouac, Snyder, McClure, Ferlinghetti, et Ginsberg legunt ac, ut Robertus Dylan dixit, magni aestimaverunt. Ergo, veri simile est scriptores Renascentiae Franciscopolis verba movisse carminum musicae rock, cuius musici sonum Franciscopolis annis 1960 exeuntibus evolvebant, in rationibus artis et habitibus vivendi.
↑Anglice: "Duncan emerg[ed] as the leading poet of this group even as he also belongs to Black Mountain. These poets, who largely became known through oral performance in the Bay Area, include the following thirteen: Brother Antoninus (William Everson), Robin Blaser, Jack Spicer, James Broughton, Madeline Gleason, Helen Adam, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Bruce Boyd, Kirby Doyle, Richard Duerden, Philip Lamantia, Ebbe Borregaard, and Lew Welch.
↑Anglice: "something else was on the way, in religione, in music, in ethics and sexuality, in our attitudes to nature, and in our whole style of life."
Allen, Donald M., ed. 1960, 1999. The New American Poetry: 1945-1960. University of California Press.
Davidson, Michael. 1989. The San Francisco Renaissance: Poetics and Community at Mid-Century. Cantabrigiae: Cambridge University Press.
Ellingham, Lewis, et Kevin Killian. 1998. Poet Be Like God: Jack Spicer and the San Francisco Renaissance. Hanoveriae Novae Hantoniae: Wesleyan University Press.
French, Warren G. 1991. The San Francisco Poetry Renaissance 1955-1960. Bostoniae: Twayne. ISBN 0805776214.
Kerouac, Jack. 1958. The Dharma Bums. Novi Eboraci: Harcourt Brace. ISBN 0140042520.
Snyder, Gary. 1980. The Real Work: Interviews & Talks 1964-1979. Novi Eboraci: New Directions. ISBN 0811207617.
Spicer, Jack. 1975. The Collected Books of Jack Spicer. Ed. cum commentario Robin Blaser. Santa Rosa Californiae: Black Sparrow Press.