Bültmann & Gerriets
The Oxford Handbook of Walt Whitman
von Kenneth M Price, Stefan Schöberlein
Verlag: Oxford University Press
Reihe: Oxford Handbooks
Gebundene Ausgabe
ISBN: 978-0-19-289484-7
Erschienen am 26.04.2024
Sprache: Englisch
Format: 244 mm [H] x 168 mm [B] x 46 mm [T]
Gewicht: 1406 Gramm
Umfang: 720 Seiten

Preis: 179,50 €
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Biografische Anmerkung
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Klappentext

Kenneth M. Price, Hillegass University Professor at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, has co-directed The Walt Whitman Archive since 1995. He is a founding co-director of the Center for Digital Research in the Humanities at Nebraska. His previous books include Whitman and Tradition: The Poet in His Century (Yale, 1990), To Walt Whitman, America (North Carolina, 2004), and, with co-author Ed Folsom, Re-Scripting Walt Whitman (Blackwell, 2005). His most recent book is Whitman in Washington: Becoming the National Poet in the Federal City (Oxford, 2020). He has served as President of both the Society for Textual Scholarship and the Association for Documentary Editing.
Stefan Schöberlein is an Assistant Professor of English at Texas A&M University-Central Texas. He also serves as contributing editor for the Whitman Archive and associate editor of the Walt Whitman Quarterly Review. His scholarship related to Whitman has appeared in journals such as American Literature, College Literature, and Textual Cultures. He is the author of Writing the Brain: Material Minds and Literature, 1800-1880 (OUP, 2023).



  • Introduction

  • Part 1. Reading and Writing Whitman

  • 1: Ed Folsom: Whitman Left to his own Devices

  • 2: Matt Cohen and Ashlyn Stewart: Walt Whitman's Archive

  • 3: Kenneth M. Price and Caterina Bernadini: Making the Cut: Whitman's Excisions and Their Consequences

  • Part 2. Notebooks, Scrapbooks, and Mutant Books

  • 4: Nicole Gray: Whitman's Prodigal "Pictures"

  • 5: Kevin McMullen: Taking a Page Out of Whitman's Scrapbook: Deconstructing and Reconstructing the Poet's Composition Process

  • 6: Blake Bronson-Bartlett: Whitman's Paginator: A Case Study in the Interpretation of Mutant Books

  • Part 3. Whitman and Data, Whitman as Data

  • 7: Zachary Turpin: Whitman's Secret Publications

  • 8: Stefan Schöberlein: Rambles Among Words: Whitman in the Etymological Thicket

  • 9: Edward Whitley: Whitman and Poe's Literary Networks

  • 10: Micah Bateman: Whitman's Web: The Political Poet 2.0

  • Part 4. Fitness, and Struggle, and the Nation

  • 11: Peter Riley: "Arm, fortify, harden, make lithe, himself": "Manly Health," German Turners, and Whitman's Poetics of Training

  • 12: Sascha Pöhlmann: Urbanity, Biopolitics, and Race in Whitman's "Manly Health and Training"

  • 13: Matt Miller: Walt Whitman: Poet of Prizefighters

  • Part 5. Whitman, Chronicler of City life

  • 14: Jason Stacy: Walt Whitman's Print Personas: 1840-1865

  • 15: Adam Bradford: "Move Slowly Through that Beautiful Place of Graves:" Walt Whitman's Cemeteries

  • 16: Glenn Hendler: Walt Whitman and the Police

  • Part 6. Whitman's Natures

  • 17: Sean Meehan and John Durham Peters: "What is it, then, between us?": Whitman's Elemental Media

  • 18: Emily Waples: Whitman's Atmospheres

  • 19: Christine Gerhardt: Whitman's Garden Ecology of Transformation

  • 20: Tom Gannon: "Flights and Songs and Screams": Walt Whitman's Birds

  • Part 7. Embodied Variants

  • 21: Ralph James Savarese and Pilar Martinez Benedi: Backhanded Compliments, Or Rehabilitating Rehabilitation in Whitman

  • 22: Don James McLaughlin: An Idle Criticism: Whitman as Disability Theorist in "How I Get Around at 60, and Take Notes"

  • 23: Lindsay Tuggle: "The Dark Bequest:" Inheriting Whitman's Unworldly Specimens

  • Part 8. Inscribing Identity

  • 24: Timothy Robbins: Walt Whitman, Daniel Garrison Brinton and the Poetics of an "American" Ethnology

  • 25: Jeffrey Einboden: Indigenous Glyphs, Granite Inscriptions: From Mazinaw to the Middle East with Whitman's Leaves

  • 26: Jacob Wilkenfeld: "O baffled, balked": Interrogating the Poetics of Absorption in Whitman's 1860 Leaves of Grass Cluster

  • Part 9. Whitman Networks, Global and National

  • 27: Walter Grünzweig: "Solidarity of the World": Walt Whitman as an International Poet

  • 28: Liu Shusen: Whitman in China: Uncovering his Early Reception from 1870 to 1920

  • 29: Bojana A¿amovi¿: "That's Me, Not Whitman": Tin Ujevi¿ and Ivan V. Lali¿ as Whitman's Yugoslav poet-translators

  • 30: Vivian Pollak: Walt Whitman and Muriel Rukeyser Among the Jews

  • 31: Dara Barnat: Walt Whitman in Jewish American Poetry: Charles Reznikoff and Allen Ginsberg



A Handbook on Walt Whitman that reflects the best new work in the field including chapters that set his work within the context of digital scholarship, discussion of new manuscript discoveries and transcriptions, exploration of environmental angles on Whitman, and a focus on disability studies.


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