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I showed W. this, which I had taken from the Home Journal:"The English relatives of Walt Whitman are,
so-called organs of public opinion: an illustration par excellence of the evil possibilities of journalism
s big edition of Ladies' Home Journal—over half a million copies per month.
W.: "That shows how little a fellow knows of the affairs of the world: the Ladies Home Journal, new,
We are permitted to extract from his journal or loose memorandum book for the past year."'
article on the poets before it goes into the magazine.There are two articles in the August Appleton's Journal
Watson's Art Journal with notice &c—I am anxious to see the picture.
Said also: "I read all the notices in the literary journals—every word of them.
consider it a special favor if you would forward me from time to time any of the English magazines or journals
savagely in the Introductory) a round talking-to on your account, apropos of his article in The Woman's Journal
W. parody in the Presbyterian Journal. Laughed over it. "It's not at all bad."
I mentioned the fact that Appleton's Journal had called attention to the moral inconsistency of this
with the L. of G.You should send copies at once to Vanity Fair, Momus, The Albion, The Day Book, The Journal
The Home Journal, N.Y., reviewing Olive Schreiner's book, says: "The Story of an African Farm contains
—all the news: but along with what's excellent in journalism it illustrates—illustrates better than any
I read this to W. from the New York Home Journal:"Walt Whitman's new volume of poems, November Boughs
Instanced the difficulties with Curtis at the start with The Ladies Home Journal of which Ferguson is
"It seems to me that in the whole range of journals pretending to anything, the Press is the greatest
the Centennial Anniversary of Whitman's Birthday," in the inaugural issue of Young China, a radical journal
large audience of intelligentsia, and essays on and translations of Whitman soon began to surface in journals
nineteenth-century American city appears in another sizable body of Whitman's prose writings: his journalism
the publication of Complete Writings, more of Whitman's uncollected writings—notes, letters, and journalism—continued
Richard Maurice Bucke in the summer of 1880, some miscellaneous journals and "autobiographical notes,
Quarterly Journal of the Library of Congress 27 (1970): 109–128.
Quarterly Journal of the Library of Congress 27 (1970): 171–176.
With his antislavery hopes frustrated, Whitman largely took leave from politics and journalism until
might hear Hebrew chanting in its traditional form (which he troubled to mention not only in his journalism
Whitman called the journals in which he kept track of business details "Daybooks."
for example, major political theorists debated Whitman's concepts of democracy in the pages of the journal
involvement with political matters in his role as editor of and contributor to various newspapers and journals
Evening Tattler, which was emblematic of the rough-and-tumble world of nineteenth-century American journalism
(section 7).Versatile Whitman wrote in prose (fiction, journalism, essays, memoirs) and verse (from early
The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 12 (1953): 98–110._____.
witnessing the war firsthand, and although the battle had ended nearly a week before his arrival, his journals
One morning the sight of three fresh corpses on stretchers moved him to make a journal entry that would
On both, the driver rode on an exposed seat at the top.In his journalism Whitman described the ferry
ideas.The Free Inquirer was originally founded in 1825 by Robert Dale Owen as the New-Harmony Gazette, a journal
Bertz, in a 1905 article for a German journal for sexual research, attempted to prove Whitman was a non-active
Gissing Journal 27.3 (1991): 1–20 and 27.4 (1991): 16–35.____. "Walt Whitman: Ein Charakterbild."
and verse fragments; and "Memoranda," a truly miscellaneous collection of short newspaper articles, journal
and nominated Martin Van Buren for president.Walt Whitman, who over the course of his career in journalism
revolutions, and pro-expansion (the term "manifest destiny" had been popularized by a Democratic journal
Whitman's seeming indifference to the plight of blacks in his journalism and early fiction reflects a
between North and South so weakened the free-soil movement that Whitman abandoned his free-soil journalism
who had focused much of his journalistic writing on slavery, wrote three letters to the free-soil journal
egalitarianism nor his identification with slaves could have been anticipated by his free-soil journalism
One way to make sense of Whitman's seeming inconsistencies on slavery is to recognize that his journalism
"Resistance to Civil Government" (later known as "Civil Disobedience") (1849), and his prodigious Journal
were Richard Maurice Bucke and Thomas Harned); he founded, edited, and published The Conservator, a journal
typesetter, a skill he would employ throughout his life as he often set the type for his monthly journal
His journal, The Conservator, which he began two years before Whitman's death and continued until his
Conservator in 1899, and Gertrude, whom Horace and Anne educated at home, joined the staff of the journal
When Jeff Whitman died in 1890, numerous obituaries, including several in major engineering journals,
free-thinking rationalist who rejected organized religion and regularly read left-leaning books and journals
The Journals of Bronson Alcott. Ed. Odell Shepard. Boston: Little, Brown, 1938. ____.
prestigious publishing houses of Ticknor and Fields and James Osgood, and the founding of two important journals
In October 1855 the American Phrenological Journal, published by Fowler and Wells, carried Whitman's
Gilder began his career in journalism as a reporter for the Newark Advertiser (1868), and by 1870 he
Birthplace Bulletin (1957–1961) and The Long Islander (1969–1974); since 1979 it has published a literary journal
Long Island Historical Journal 6.1 (1993): 83–95. Petersen, WIlliam J. "The Walt Whitman Club."
Journal of Literature and Theology 7.1 (1993): 50–65.Schneidau, Herbert.
"Walt Whitman's Journalism: A Bibliography." Walt Whitman Review 14 (1968): 67–141.____.
Traubel attacked the book in The Conservator, his journal devoted to the worship of Whitman, for its
The Long Island Historical Journal 6.1 (1993): 83–95. Birthplace, Whitman's
StephenRachmanBroadway JournalBroadway JournalAs editor of the Broadway Journal, Edgar Allan Poe printed
When Poe joined the staff, however, the Journal soon became a forum for his critical obsessions, most
The Journal ceased publication in January 1846."
Broadway Journal 29 November 1845: 318–319.
Broadway Journal
political resistance.Whitman's Times articles display the humanitarian concerns of his earlier journalism
Whitman's stint with the Times has often been considered less pertinent to his poetry than his journalism
Journalism Quarterly 48 (1971): 431–437.Erkkila, Betsy. Whitman the Political Poet.