Walt WhitmanOxford University Press, 7 янв. 2005 г. - Всего страниц: 176 From the great events of the day to the patient workings of a spider, few poets responded to the life around them as powerfully as Walt Whitman. Now, in this brief but bountiful volume, David S. Reynolds offers a wealth of insight into the life and work of Whitman, examining the author through the lens of nineteenth-century America. Reynolds shows how Whitman responded to contemporary theater, music, painting, photography, science, religion, and sex. But perhaps nothing influenced Whitman more than the political events of his lifetime, as the struggle over slavery threatened to rip apart the national fabric. America, he believed, desperately needed a poet to hold together a society that was on the verge of unraveling. He created his powerful, all-absorbing poetic "I" to heal a fragmented nation that, he hoped, would find in his poetry new possibilities for inspiration and togetherness. Reynolds also examines the influence of theater, describing how Whitman's favorite actor, the tragedian Junius Brutus Booth--"one of the grandest revelations of my life"--developed a powerfully emotive stage style that influenced Leaves of Grass, which took passionate poetic expression to new heights. Readers will also discover how from the new medium of photography Whitman learned democratic realism and offered in his poetry "photographs" of common people engaged in everyday activities. Reynolds concludes with an appraisal of Whitman's impact on American letters, an influence that remains strong today. Solidly grounded in historical and biographical facts, and exceptionally wide-ranging in the themes it treats, Walt Whitman packs a dazzling amount of insight into a compact volume. |
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... LONG ISLAND village of West Hills, some fifty miles east of Manhattan. He was descended from two branches of early ... Long Island, where he became a farmer and local official. He gained large land holdings that came to be known as ...
... LONG ISLAND village of West Hills, some fifty miles east of Manhattan. He was descended from two branches of early ... Long Island, where he became a farmer and local official. He gained large land holdings that came to be known as ...
Стр. 4
... Long Island, not far from the Whitman homestead. Her mother, Naomi (“Amy”) Van Velsor, was a kindly Quaker woman whose death in 1826 was a shattering experience for the young Walt. Her father, Major Cornelius Van Velsor, was a florid ...
... Long Island, not far from the Whitman homestead. Her mother, Naomi (“Amy”) Van Velsor, was a kindly Quaker woman whose death in 1826 was a shattering experience for the young Walt. Her father, Major Cornelius Van Velsor, was a florid ...
Стр. 5
... Long Island to the east and rapidly urbanizing Manhattan to the west, with easy access to both. Among the Brooklyn experiences that stood outin his memory was the visit on July 4, 1825, of the great Revolutionary War hero, the Marquis ...
... Long Island to the east and rapidly urbanizing Manhattan to the west, with easy access to both. Among the Brooklyn experiences that stood outin his memory was the visit on July 4, 1825, of the great Revolutionary War hero, the Marquis ...
Стр. 6
... Long Island, leaving him to work in Brooklyn. He soon switched newspapers, taking a job as a compositor for the Whig Long Island Star, edited by Alden Spooner. He stayed with the vibrant, influential Spooner for three years before ...
... Long Island, leaving him to work in Brooklyn. He soon switched newspapers, taking a job as a compositor for the Whig Long Island Star, edited by Alden Spooner. He stayed with the vibrant, influential Spooner for three years before ...
Стр. 7
... Long Island, where he became a traveling schoolteacher. He taught a basic curriculum in small one-room schoolhouses in successive villages, including Norwich, West Babylon, Smithtown, Little Bayside, and Woodbury. He used a relaxed ...
... Long Island, where he became a traveling schoolteacher. He taught a basic curriculum in small one-room schoolhouses in successive villages, including Norwich, West Babylon, Smithtown, Little Bayside, and Woodbury. He used a relaxed ...
Содержание
1 | |
POPULAR CULTURE CITY LIFE AND POLITICS | 24 |
THEATER ORATORY AND MUSIC | 41 |
THE VISUAL ARTS | 57 |
SCIENCE PHILOSOPHY AND RELIGION | 76 |
SEX GENDER AND COMRADESHIP | 101 |
THE CIVIL WAR LINCOLN AND RECONSTRUCTION | 123 |
LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS | 141 |
NOTES | 143 |
NOTES ON FURTHER READING | 153 |
INDEX | 155 |
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absorb actor admired African American Alboni Ameri American antebellum antislavery artistic b’hoy beauty became Beecher body Brooklyn Daily Eagle Calamus com con Crossing Brooklyn Ferry cultural daguerreotype death democratic early earth editions of Leaves Emerson Emory Holloway free love genre God’s Harmonial Horatio Greenough human images Junius Brutus Booth later Leaves of Grass lecture Liebig Lincoln literature Long Island lovers luminist magnetic man Manhattan marriage Mount mystical nation nature newspaper notebook novels NUPM O’Connor opera oratory Orson Fowler painters paintings paragraph passionate person Photographs Division phrenology poet’s poetic political popular preface Prints and Photographs Prose prostitution quotation religion religious sexual singers singing slave slavery social Song soul spiritual spiritualist streets style Swedenborgian tion told Traubel University Press WALT W Walt Whitman Whitman saw Whitman wrote Whitman’s poems Whitman’s poetry woman women women’s rights writes York