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Between the 1860 publication of the third edition of and the publication of the fourth edition six-and-a-half
It seems, then, that one effect of these various encoding choices we've inherited—even though they were
Intimate with Walt: Selections from Walt Whitman's Conversations with Horace Traubel, 1888-1892 (Iowa City
I would like to begin by briefly telling a long story, an all too familiar one, a story of American literary
There were more and more universities, and more and more graduate students, and more and more professors
that the nature of scholarship itself changed to accommodate a suddenly swollen mass of scholars, who were
Still, it is the standard edition, the edition cited by American literary scholarship over the past few
So much of the labor of book-editions of were devoted to the process of turning materials—manuscripts
Kennedy's differences with Traubel were more intense.
On the Bowery, see Christine Stansell, City of Women: Sex and Class in New York, 1789–1860 (Urbana: Univ
," American Literary History 6 [winter 1994]: 648).
Modernism," American Quarterly 39 [spring 1987]: 12).
there were several.
Price, first appeared in American Literature 73.3 (2001): 497-524.
Note: Whitman refers here to the three first editions of Leaves (1855, 1856, and 1860), which were written
American City Names One day Walt fulminated about the habit of giving cities Old World names, speaking
were not as really American as we were.
The American Idea of a Good Time WarrieFritzinger’sreportofavisittothebustlingseasideresortAtlantic City
American Sculpture I have seen most of the statutes in Central Park and off through the city there,andmustsayofthem