Whitman's poetry is a rich subject for psychoanalytic interpretation and this has always had a unique appeal to literary critics as well as research scholars. This study is a critical and psychoanalytical study on a few selected poems of Whitman. The poems have been selected from the 1860 edition of Leaves of Grass that featured Whitman's most famous poem Song of Myself which is the main poem used throughout. Other poems were selected as a support to identify Whitman's belief that every individual is born with a unique identity and the individual strives continuously to realize this individuality that is hidden in the various challenges of life, both the darker and the lighter aspects of life. A critical analysis together with the psychoana...
Walt Whitman is recognized by most authorities as one of the greatest of American poets. His most im...
Philosophers and outside observers of American life, such as Tocqueville, believe American literatur...
Whitman portrays his poetic self in overwhelmingly celebrating terms in “Song of Myself.&rdquo...
Whitman’s poetry is a rich subject for psychoanalytic interpretation and this has always had a uniqu...
The influence of Ralph Waldo Emerson on Walt Whitman's Leaves of Grass is well known; equally well k...
This paper explores the constituents of Walt Whitman\u27s poetic self – soul and body; its hopes, te...
Many of Walt Whitman’s poems in Leaves of Grass center on the themes of the nature of identity and t...
This study analyzes pantheism concept in selected Walt Whitman’s poems. Walt Whitman maintained an o...
This thesis proposes a unified theory for reading and interpreting Leaves of Grass (1891-92), by Am...
The problem of the present study is to discover evidences of mysticism as revealed in eight poems in...
Traces Whitman\u27s influence on the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth-century philosophical movem...
Walt Whitman gives us much insight into himself and others in his poetry, and gives his readers a gr...
"The study examines Whitman's engagement with mind-cure and mental science therapies between 1855 an...
That both in his poetry and his prose Whitman dealt not infrequently with material suggested by his ...
This oral presentation investigates pronoun choices and environmental imagery in Walt Whitman’s Song...
Walt Whitman is recognized by most authorities as one of the greatest of American poets. His most im...
Philosophers and outside observers of American life, such as Tocqueville, believe American literatur...
Whitman portrays his poetic self in overwhelmingly celebrating terms in “Song of Myself.&rdquo...
Whitman’s poetry is a rich subject for psychoanalytic interpretation and this has always had a uniqu...
The influence of Ralph Waldo Emerson on Walt Whitman's Leaves of Grass is well known; equally well k...
This paper explores the constituents of Walt Whitman\u27s poetic self – soul and body; its hopes, te...
Many of Walt Whitman’s poems in Leaves of Grass center on the themes of the nature of identity and t...
This study analyzes pantheism concept in selected Walt Whitman’s poems. Walt Whitman maintained an o...
This thesis proposes a unified theory for reading and interpreting Leaves of Grass (1891-92), by Am...
The problem of the present study is to discover evidences of mysticism as revealed in eight poems in...
Traces Whitman\u27s influence on the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth-century philosophical movem...
Walt Whitman gives us much insight into himself and others in his poetry, and gives his readers a gr...
"The study examines Whitman's engagement with mind-cure and mental science therapies between 1855 an...
That both in his poetry and his prose Whitman dealt not infrequently with material suggested by his ...
This oral presentation investigates pronoun choices and environmental imagery in Walt Whitman’s Song...
Walt Whitman is recognized by most authorities as one of the greatest of American poets. His most im...
Philosophers and outside observers of American life, such as Tocqueville, believe American literatur...
Whitman portrays his poetic self in overwhelmingly celebrating terms in “Song of Myself.&rdquo...