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Search : journalism

1424 results

The Water Works—A Celebration in Contemplation

  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

This piece is unsigned, as was the case for most of Whitman's journalism.

series of texts that deal with a coherent theme that has been identified by the Whitman Archive journalism

The Water Works—Brooklyn City Bonds

  • Date: 3 October 1857
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

This piece is unsigned, as was the case for most of Whitman's journalism.

series of texts that deal with a coherent theme that has been identified by the Whitman Archive journalism

The Water Works—Difficulties Ahead

  • Date: 22 August 1857
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

This piece is unsigned, as was the case for most of Whitman's journalism.

series of texts that deal with a coherent theme that has been identified by the Whitman Archive journalism

Waterworks editorials in the Brooklyn Daily Times

  • Date: 2024
  • Creator(s): Stephanie M. Blalock | Kevin McMullen | Stefan Schöberlein | Jason Stacy
Text:

Whitman's journalism on the Brooklyn Waterworks constitutes one of his longest sets of texts published

interest in the issue, yet the decidedly mundane, prosaic argument that dominated his Waterworks journalism

William White's 1969 bibliography of Whitman's journalism largely replicates this decision.

constituted "an important chapter in the history of U.S. public works" and the role that local journalism

Brooklyn Daily Times Walt Whitman Quarterly Review 2015 33 1 21–50 White, William Walt Whitman's Journalism

The Way Lives are Wasted

  • Date: 23 June 1858
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

This piece is unsigned, as was the case for most of Whitman's journalism.

series of texts that deal with a coherent theme that has been identified by the Whitman Archive journalism

We

  • Date: 9 April 1842
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

further reading, see: Jason Stacy, Walt Whitman's Multitudes: Labor Reform and Persona in Whitman's Journalism

, without vanity, that we have full confidence in our capacities to make Aurora the most readable journal

In contrast, the Aurora was sold as a subscription, as was The Journal of Commerce .

this editorial was written, and Herbert Bergman identified him as its author in Walt Whitman, The Journalism

[We are now in midsummer]

  • Date: 26 July 1858
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

This piece is unsigned, as was the case for most of Whitman's journalism.

series of texts that deal with a coherent theme that has been identified by the Whitman Archive journalism

We Have Pitched Our Tent On A New Spot

  • Date: 5 May 1858
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

This piece is unsigned, as was the case for most of Whitman's journalism.

series of texts that deal with a coherent theme that has been identified by the Whitman Archive journalism

[We have received Godey's Lady's Book]

  • Date: 16 July 1858
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

This piece is unsigned, as was the case for most of Whitman's journalism.

series of texts that deal with a coherent theme that has been identified by the Whitman Archive journalism

[We hear a good deal]

  • Date: 29 May 1857
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

This piece is unsigned, as was the case for most of Whitman's journalism.

series of texts that deal with a coherent theme that has been identified by the Whitman Archive journalism

[We observe from our friend]

  • Date: 22 April 1858
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

This piece is unsigned, as was the case for most of Whitman's journalism.

series of texts that deal with a coherent theme that has been identified by the Whitman Archive journalism

[We ought to have a series]

  • Date: 17 September 1858
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

This piece is unsigned, as was the case for most of Whitman's journalism.

series of texts that deal with a coherent theme that has been identified by the Whitman Archive journalism

[We proceed this morning to]

  • Date: 5 April 1842
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

this editorial was written, and Herbert Bergman identified him as its author in Walt Whitman, The Journalism

The Weather

  • Date: 13 August 1857
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

This piece is unsigned, as was the case for most of Whitman's journalism.

series of texts that deal with a coherent theme that has been identified by the Whitman Archive journalism

Wednesday, April 3, 1889

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

so-called organs of public opinion: an illustration par excellence of the evil possibilities of journalism

Wednesday, August 19, 1891

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

not significant as standing there advocating not Baxter's views alone but the views of the whole journal

For instance, the Appleton Journal stories—one of them—and by a writer who must have known better had

Which, to get into a great popular journal, go among some thousands of people, is vexatious, entirely

Wednesday, February 20, 1889

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

Reference also to Appleton's Journal criticism. W. at once:"Well—does it not satisfy you?

Wednesday, February 5, 1890

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

Williams that W. should not embrace the tender—that the young men were more concerned to advertise their journal

Wednesday, July 1, 1891

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

Bok writes this story to the Boston Journal about W.

Wednesday, July 18, 1888.

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

His tone toward you, in the Woman's Journal article (and the Nation was probably his,) shows extreme

Wednesday, May 16, 1888.

  • Creator(s): Horace Traubel | Traubel, Horace
Text:

spirit destined for sacrifice—destined to the grind, the terrific strain, incident to metropolitan journalism

The Westminster Review

  • Date: 5 November 1857
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

This piece is unsigned, as was the case for most of Whitman's journalism.

series of texts that deal with a coherent theme that has been identified by the Whitman Archive journalism

The Westminster Review for April

  • Date: 10 May 1858
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

This piece is unsigned, as was the case for most of Whitman's journalism.

series of texts that deal with a coherent theme that has been identified by the Whitman Archive journalism

Westminster Review, The

  • Creator(s): Barcus, James E., Jr.
Text:

Edinburgh Review, Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, and the Westminster Review, a liberal Benthamite journal

What are We Coming to?

  • Date: 5 August 1857
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

This piece is unsigned, as was the case for most of Whitman's journalism.

series of texts that deal with a coherent theme that has been identified by the Whitman Archive journalism

"What I Assume You Shall Assume":The Whitman Archive and the Challenge of Integrating Different Open Standards

  • Date: 2004
  • Creator(s): Brett Barney | Kenneth M. Price
Text:

published volumes of poetry and prose, along with his correspondence, notebooks, daybooks, manuscripts, journalism

For example, because of delays in preparing the manuscript of the projected six volumes of journalism

What Injunctions May Effect

  • Date: 2 May 2 1857
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

This piece is unsigned, as was the case for most of Whitman's journalism.

series of texts that deal with a coherent theme that has been identified by the Whitman Archive journalism

What is Lager Bier?

  • Date: 29 September 1857
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

This piece is unsigned, as was the case for most of Whitman's journalism.

series of texts that deal with a coherent theme that has been identified by the Whitman Archive journalism

What is to Become of the Canadas?

  • Date: 31 July 1857
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

This piece is unsigned, as was the case for most of Whitman's journalism.

series of texts that deal with a coherent theme that has been identified by the Whitman Archive journalism

What It Will Effect

  • Date: 24 August 1857
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

This piece is unsigned, as was the case for most of Whitman's journalism.

series of texts that deal with a coherent theme that has been identified by the Whitman Archive journalism

What Shall We Call the Water?

  • Date: 21 January 1859
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

This piece is unsigned, as was the case for most of Whitman's journalism.

series of texts that deal with a coherent theme that has been identified by the Whitman Archive journalism

What They Want

  • Date: 12 November 1857
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

This piece is unsigned, as was the case for most of Whitman's journalism.

series of texts that deal with a coherent theme that has been identified by the Whitman Archive journalism

What We Drink

  • Date: 18 October 1858
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

This piece is unsigned, as was the case for most of Whitman's journalism.

series of texts that deal with a coherent theme that has been identified by the Whitman Archive journalism

What We Pay for Schools

  • Date: 23 March 1858
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

This piece is unsigned, as was the case for most of Whitman's journalism.

series of texts that deal with a coherent theme that has been identified by the Whitman Archive journalism

What Williamsburg Wants

  • Date: 15 January 1858
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

This piece is unsigned, as was the case for most of Whitman's journalism.

series of texts that deal with a coherent theme that has been identified by the Whitman Archive journalism

What's the Row?

  • Date: 28 March 1842
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

this editorial was written, and Herbert Bergman identified him as its author in Walt Whitman, The Journalism

Which “Pathy” Will You Have?

  • Date: 19 June 1858
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

And similar experiments are recorded in the medical journals, comprehending hundreds of thousands of

This piece is unsigned, as was the case for most of Whitman's journalism.

series of texts that deal with a coherent theme that has been identified by the Whitman Archive journalism

Whipping

  • Date: 1 April 1842
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

this editorial was written, and Herbert Bergman identified him as its author in Walt Whitman, The Journalism

Whipping in Schools

  • Date: 30 June 1857
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

This piece is unsigned, as was the case for most of Whitman's journalism.

series of texts that deal with a coherent theme that has been identified by the Whitman Archive journalism

Whipping the Devil Round the Stump

  • Date: 24 April 1858
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

This piece is unsigned, as was the case for most of Whitman's journalism.

series of texts that deal with a coherent theme that has been identified by the Whitman Archive journalism

White labor, versus Black labor

  • Date: 25 May 1857
  • Creator(s): Walt Whitman
Text:

This piece is unsigned, as was the case for most of Whitman's journalism.

series of texts that deal with a coherent theme that has been identified by the Whitman Archive journalism

White, William (1910–1995)

  • Creator(s): Kummings, Donald D.
Text:

of his career he had contributed roughly twenty-five hundred articles and reviews to professional journals

White's important contributions to Whitman scholarship can be noted here: he authored Walt Whitman's Journalism

Southern California (M.A., 1937), and the University of London (Ph.D., 1953), White taught courses in journalism

Whitman & Dickinson: A Colloquy

  • Date: 2017
  • Creator(s): Athenot, Éric | Miller, Cristanne
Text:

wild protégés—was a particularly significant journal in laying the early groundwork for what has become

In his letter to Emerson of January 17, 1863,Whitman already referred to his journal ofwaras growing“

Roudeau has also published numerous essays in French and American journals such as Revue française d’

Ben Perley Poore wrote in the Boston Journal that the recent news that Tennyson had invitedWhitman to

Buinicki WaltWhitman’s Selected Journalism, edited by Douglas A.

Whitman among the Bohemians

  • Date: 2014
  • Creator(s): Levin, Joanna | Whitley, Edward
Text:

Mott, American Journalism, 354–55. Ka r e n Ka rB Ie n e r { 15 20.

Mott, American Journalism, 355. 23.

Whitman, Journalism, 1:172–73. r oB e rT J.

Journal of American Studies 37 (2003): 1–15. Armstrong, Nancy.

Fitz-James O’Brien: Selected Literary Journalism, 1852–1860.

A Whitman Chronology

  • Date: 1998
  • Creator(s): Krieg, Joann P.
Text:

"The Boy Lover" is published in the American Re view, a Whig journal.

Walter keeps a journal and later publishes portions of it in the Crescent. 2 5 FEBRUARY.

Wells), publishers of the American Phreno logical Journal (Myerson, Walt Whitman, 19).

This is a positive review in the country's most influential literary journal.

"Old Brooklyn Days" appears in the New York Morning Journal (seePW, 2:773-774). 16 AUGUST.

Whitman East & West: New Contexts for Reading Walt Whitman

  • Date: 2002
  • Creator(s): Folsom, Ed
Text:

Agatha’s rise to public success, through an earlier ca- reer in journalism, occurred despite a scandal

Louis Hyde, ed.,Rat and the Devil: Journal Letters of F. O.

and in his journals and notebooks of the time, Whitman was so gloomy about the state of national and

Whitman’s Leaves of Grass,” Journal of Foreign Languages 3 (May 1985), 24. 9.

His many essays on Whitman have appeared in numerous journals and books, including A Historical Guide

Whitman in France and Belgium

  • Creator(s): Asselineau, Roger
Text:

influence of the Bazalgette and NRF translations, reinforced in 1926 by a translation of Pages de journal

André Gide perfidiously noted in his Journal, 1889–1939 : "When I see Maeterlinck in such rapture, I

Whitman in His Own Time

  • Date: 1991
  • Creator(s): Myerson, Joel
Text:

record ofhis life was as compelling as the written one that was conveyed in his own letters and journals

He regularly wrote to newspapers and journals about his books and his life; and these letters or articles

But I have lately been looking over the journals of Thoreau, and I am satisfied that I was right.

How good is that article in the January number of Appleton's Journal on Heine!

From The journals of Bronson Alcott,ed.

Whitman in Russia

  • Creator(s): Stephen Stepanchev
Text:

An essay about him with a selection of translated poems would, I think, be acceptable to every journal

The last-mentioned journal characterized Whitman as "the American Tolstoy" and as "the most remarkable

Numerous writers and journals assisted in relating Whitman to the Russian zeitgeist, in making him a

The form of his verses seemed so slovenly and awkward that at first not a single journal would agree

Petersburg journals, that the student Youth Circle of the St.

Whitman in the German-Speaking Countries

  • Creator(s): Walter Grünzweig
Text:

A regular series in this journal featured the contributions of homosexuals to human history.

(selection 4) is a late contribution, published in the Jahrbuch für Sexuelle Zwischenstufen , the journal

Reisiger "encountered" Whitman as early as 1909 and published his first translations in the leftist journal

During Drey's short literary career, he contributed to the important expressionist journals Der Sturm

Gamper (1873–1948) and Hans Reinhart (1880–1963) appeared next to each other in a Swiss literary journal

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