While Walt Whitman’s thematic use of the Orient continues to receive critical attention based on his explicit foreign references, aside from observations of specific Persian signifiers in “A Persian Lesson,” his engagement with the poetry of Iran has remained especially speculative and therefore analogical, with studies like J. R. LeMaster and Sabahat Jahan’s Walt Whitman and the Persian Poets showing how his mystical relation to his own religious influences tends to resemble the Sufism of Rumi and Hafez. A new discovery emerging from an examination of his personal copy of William Alger’s The Poetry of the East along with his reading of Emerson’s essay “Persian Poetry,” however, reveal a rather subtle yet sustained attempt to directly imita...
Walt Whitman initiated a revolution in poetry with his publication of Leaves of Grass by means of ca...
Special double issue of WWQR, with selected essays from the 1998 Rutgers-Camden "Many Cultures of Wa...
Walt Whitman was an enormous influence on Allen Ginsberg, which Lawrence Ferlinghetti recognized at ...
While Walt Whitman’s thematic use of the Orient continues to receive critical attention based on his...
While Walt Whitman’s thematic use of the Orient continues to receive critical attention based on his...
Explores Whitman\u27s relationship to poetry of the Near East, focusing on "two specific areas of Ne...
Walt Whitman, a world poet and the father of American free verse, has been received by diverse audie...
Walt Whitman, a world poet and the father of American free verse, has been read by diverse audiences...
Addressing Walt Whitman’s reception in Iran, the present essay focuses on the front cover of a book-...
Examines William Michael Rossetti\u27s editorial influence on the Drum-Taps cluster in Leaves of G...
Explores the similarities and differences between Whitman\u27s Drum-Taps and Thomas Wentworth Higgin...
This project examines Walt Whitman’s poetic voice – pre, during, and post-Civil War conflict. The es...
Argues against previous critics\u27 claims that the order in which the poems appear in Leaves of Gr...
This research paper examines the rhetorical devices used in Walt Whitman's (1819-1892) early, mid a...
Examines Ha Jin\u27s use of Whitman in his 1999 novel Waiting, analyzing the effects of evoking Whit...
Walt Whitman initiated a revolution in poetry with his publication of Leaves of Grass by means of ca...
Special double issue of WWQR, with selected essays from the 1998 Rutgers-Camden "Many Cultures of Wa...
Walt Whitman was an enormous influence on Allen Ginsberg, which Lawrence Ferlinghetti recognized at ...
While Walt Whitman’s thematic use of the Orient continues to receive critical attention based on his...
While Walt Whitman’s thematic use of the Orient continues to receive critical attention based on his...
Explores Whitman\u27s relationship to poetry of the Near East, focusing on "two specific areas of Ne...
Walt Whitman, a world poet and the father of American free verse, has been received by diverse audie...
Walt Whitman, a world poet and the father of American free verse, has been read by diverse audiences...
Addressing Walt Whitman’s reception in Iran, the present essay focuses on the front cover of a book-...
Examines William Michael Rossetti\u27s editorial influence on the Drum-Taps cluster in Leaves of G...
Explores the similarities and differences between Whitman\u27s Drum-Taps and Thomas Wentworth Higgin...
This project examines Walt Whitman’s poetic voice – pre, during, and post-Civil War conflict. The es...
Argues against previous critics\u27 claims that the order in which the poems appear in Leaves of Gr...
This research paper examines the rhetorical devices used in Walt Whitman's (1819-1892) early, mid a...
Examines Ha Jin\u27s use of Whitman in his 1999 novel Waiting, analyzing the effects of evoking Whit...
Walt Whitman initiated a revolution in poetry with his publication of Leaves of Grass by means of ca...
Special double issue of WWQR, with selected essays from the 1998 Rutgers-Camden "Many Cultures of Wa...
Walt Whitman was an enormous influence on Allen Ginsberg, which Lawrence Ferlinghetti recognized at ...