OnlinePublAlthough scholars have long recognized that classical Stoicism affected Walt Whitman’s work, a full account of the extent of this debt has yet to be produced. Although he drew inspiration from many sources, we argue that Whitman’s “spinal ideas”—the ontological, moral, metaphysical and political threads of order in his thinking—are most consistently Stoic in origin. We do so by examining Whitman’s poetry, prose, correspondence, manuscripts, notebooks, and autobiography in the context of the primary and secondary Stoic material with which he was familiar. We demonstrate that a number of ideas at the heart of Whitman’s literary vision—his pantheism, materialism, cosmopolitanism, reconciliation of evil and death, and conceptions of b...
This study analyzes pantheism concept in selected Walt Whitman’s poems. Walt Whitman maintained an o...
Stoic ideals infused seventeenth- and eighteenth-century thought, not only in the figure of the asce...
This project explores the nature and extent of the relationship between Blake and Whitman. I examine...
In 1860, Walt Whitman released what he called the “new American Bible.” This claim scandalized Ameri...
That both in his poetry and his prose Whitman dealt not infrequently with material suggested by his ...
One of the most influential and well recognized writers of the 19th century is Walt Whitman. He crea...
The influence of Ralph Waldo Emerson on Walt Whitman's Leaves of Grass is well known; equally well k...
Traces Whitman\u27s influence on the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth-century philosophical movem...
Philosophers and outside observers of American life, such as Tocqueville, believe American literatur...
This thesis proposes a unified theory for reading and interpreting Leaves of Grass (1891-92), by Am...
This volume will be a great aid to students and scholars alike in American literature, American thou...
Walt Whitman gives us much insight into himself and others in his poetry, and gives his readers a gr...
Inconstant Stoics reveals stoicism\u27s pervasive presence in the eighteenth-century moral imaginati...
Romanticism is often misunderstood as something genuine love and merely about romance. In fact, roma...
Community of individuals Whitman embodied America Walt Whitman is one of the foundational figures ...
This study analyzes pantheism concept in selected Walt Whitman’s poems. Walt Whitman maintained an o...
Stoic ideals infused seventeenth- and eighteenth-century thought, not only in the figure of the asce...
This project explores the nature and extent of the relationship between Blake and Whitman. I examine...
In 1860, Walt Whitman released what he called the “new American Bible.” This claim scandalized Ameri...
That both in his poetry and his prose Whitman dealt not infrequently with material suggested by his ...
One of the most influential and well recognized writers of the 19th century is Walt Whitman. He crea...
The influence of Ralph Waldo Emerson on Walt Whitman's Leaves of Grass is well known; equally well k...
Traces Whitman\u27s influence on the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth-century philosophical movem...
Philosophers and outside observers of American life, such as Tocqueville, believe American literatur...
This thesis proposes a unified theory for reading and interpreting Leaves of Grass (1891-92), by Am...
This volume will be a great aid to students and scholars alike in American literature, American thou...
Walt Whitman gives us much insight into himself and others in his poetry, and gives his readers a gr...
Inconstant Stoics reveals stoicism\u27s pervasive presence in the eighteenth-century moral imaginati...
Romanticism is often misunderstood as something genuine love and merely about romance. In fact, roma...
Community of individuals Whitman embodied America Walt Whitman is one of the foundational figures ...
This study analyzes pantheism concept in selected Walt Whitman’s poems. Walt Whitman maintained an o...
Stoic ideals infused seventeenth- and eighteenth-century thought, not only in the figure of the asce...
This project explores the nature and extent of the relationship between Blake and Whitman. I examine...