Examines the relationship between Whitman and his 1881 Boston publisher, James Ripley Osgood, emphasizing their early acquaintance at Pfaff\u27s beer hall in New York and re-examining the 1882 controversy over the banning of Leaves of Grass in Boston
Demonstrates the importance of an early page of Whitman\u27s handwritten notes (currently in the Uni...
Examines Whitman\u27s complex publishing relationship with the New York Herald from December 1887 th...
Prints a Whitman manuscript fragment about Emerson, in which Whitman calls Emerson too cautious ; f...
Examines the relationship between Whitman and his 1881 Boston publisher, James Ripley Osgood, emphas...
Examines the relationship between Whitman and his Philadelphia publisher, David McKay, and explores ...
Examines a previously unrecorded notice of the first edition of Leaves of Grass published in the Sep...
Few scholars have attempted to conduct a close examination of Whitman\u27s relationship to his publi...
Presents two 1856 reviews of the 1855 edition of Leaves of Grass not included in Kenneth M. Price\u2...
Introduces two little-known sketches Whitman made for the spine of the 1856 edition of Leaves of Gra...
Reprints and discusses a broadside published by E. C. Walker in the early 1880s, advertising Leaves ...
Reprints and discusses a broadside published by E. C. Walker in the early 1880s, advertising Leaves ...
Describes a unique copy of the 1882 Camden "Author\u27s Edition" of Leaves of Grass, inscribed by Wh...
Argues that Whitman scholarship has minimized the extent to which the poet envisioned Leaves of Gras...
Identifies and comments on two previously unrecorded reviews of Leaves of Grass, one by George Eliot...
Explores the reaction of James Elliot Cabot to a copy of the 1855 Leaves of Grass, loaned to him by ...
Demonstrates the importance of an early page of Whitman\u27s handwritten notes (currently in the Uni...
Examines Whitman\u27s complex publishing relationship with the New York Herald from December 1887 th...
Prints a Whitman manuscript fragment about Emerson, in which Whitman calls Emerson too cautious ; f...
Examines the relationship between Whitman and his 1881 Boston publisher, James Ripley Osgood, emphas...
Examines the relationship between Whitman and his Philadelphia publisher, David McKay, and explores ...
Examines a previously unrecorded notice of the first edition of Leaves of Grass published in the Sep...
Few scholars have attempted to conduct a close examination of Whitman\u27s relationship to his publi...
Presents two 1856 reviews of the 1855 edition of Leaves of Grass not included in Kenneth M. Price\u2...
Introduces two little-known sketches Whitman made for the spine of the 1856 edition of Leaves of Gra...
Reprints and discusses a broadside published by E. C. Walker in the early 1880s, advertising Leaves ...
Reprints and discusses a broadside published by E. C. Walker in the early 1880s, advertising Leaves ...
Describes a unique copy of the 1882 Camden "Author\u27s Edition" of Leaves of Grass, inscribed by Wh...
Argues that Whitman scholarship has minimized the extent to which the poet envisioned Leaves of Gras...
Identifies and comments on two previously unrecorded reviews of Leaves of Grass, one by George Eliot...
Explores the reaction of James Elliot Cabot to a copy of the 1855 Leaves of Grass, loaned to him by ...
Demonstrates the importance of an early page of Whitman\u27s handwritten notes (currently in the Uni...
Examines Whitman\u27s complex publishing relationship with the New York Herald from December 1887 th...
Prints a Whitman manuscript fragment about Emerson, in which Whitman calls Emerson too cautious ; f...