Examines Whitman\u27s journalism, focusing on his stories and editorials like "A Lazy Day" that present the author in a "slacker pose"; argues that while Whitman\u27s "agitations for public space change over time," he "ultimately champions the notion of allocating higher grounds for public use, allowing all city-dwellers the opportunity to experience the all-encompassing power of the panoramic.
Examines the "poems, parodies, homages, reviews, and essays concerning Whitman that were either firs...
Investigates the anecdote about Whitman being watched by the police at the 1853 Crystal Palace Exhib...
Presents two 1856 reviews of the 1855 edition of Leaves of Grass not included in Kenneth M. Price\u2...
Examines Whitman\u27s journalism, focusing on his stories and editorials like A Lazy Day that pres...
Walt Whitman lived in the New York area and spent most of his life in urban environments, so it is p...
Examines Whitman\u27s complex publishing relationship with the New York Herald from December 1887 th...
Introduces and presents what had been a lost essay by Whitman, first published in Life Illustrated o...
Examines Whitman\u27s complex publishing relationship with the New York Herald from December 1887 th...
The Walt Whitman Archive journalism grant team introduces a new discovery and proposes a new th...
Argues that the social crisis produced by urbanization shaped Whitman\u27s poetry and pragmatist th...
Describes the location of historic "Trimming Square" where Whitman taught in 1839 and 1840 and offer...
A review of Stefan Schöberlein, ed., Walt Whitman’s New Orleans: Sidewalk Sketches and Newspaper Ram...
Examines a broad range of Whitman\u27s prose--from his early journalism through Democratic Vistas an...
Describes the short-lived 1865 New York City humor magazine called Mrs. Grundy and presents a hither...
Whitman’s “Letters from a Travelllling Bachelor,” written for the New York Sunday Dispatch (October ...
Examines the "poems, parodies, homages, reviews, and essays concerning Whitman that were either firs...
Investigates the anecdote about Whitman being watched by the police at the 1853 Crystal Palace Exhib...
Presents two 1856 reviews of the 1855 edition of Leaves of Grass not included in Kenneth M. Price\u2...
Examines Whitman\u27s journalism, focusing on his stories and editorials like A Lazy Day that pres...
Walt Whitman lived in the New York area and spent most of his life in urban environments, so it is p...
Examines Whitman\u27s complex publishing relationship with the New York Herald from December 1887 th...
Introduces and presents what had been a lost essay by Whitman, first published in Life Illustrated o...
Examines Whitman\u27s complex publishing relationship with the New York Herald from December 1887 th...
The Walt Whitman Archive journalism grant team introduces a new discovery and proposes a new th...
Argues that the social crisis produced by urbanization shaped Whitman\u27s poetry and pragmatist th...
Describes the location of historic "Trimming Square" where Whitman taught in 1839 and 1840 and offer...
A review of Stefan Schöberlein, ed., Walt Whitman’s New Orleans: Sidewalk Sketches and Newspaper Ram...
Examines a broad range of Whitman\u27s prose--from his early journalism through Democratic Vistas an...
Describes the short-lived 1865 New York City humor magazine called Mrs. Grundy and presents a hither...
Whitman’s “Letters from a Travelllling Bachelor,” written for the New York Sunday Dispatch (October ...
Examines the "poems, parodies, homages, reviews, and essays concerning Whitman that were either firs...
Investigates the anecdote about Whitman being watched by the police at the 1853 Crystal Palace Exhib...
Presents two 1856 reviews of the 1855 edition of Leaves of Grass not included in Kenneth M. Price\u2...