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In the 9 June 1860 issue of the journal, Mary A.
poetry.Rudolf Schmidt, the translator of Democratic Vistas, was the enterprising editor of a new journal
experience explains Whitman's transcendence of his character as a minor writer of fiction, poems, and journalism
AnonymousSelf-Reviews of the 1855 Leaves, Whitman's AnonymousThroughout his career, Whitman used his connections in journalism
of Grass in no fewer than three periodicals—the United States Review, the American Phrenological Journal
This agenda is especially clear in the piece written for the American Phrenological Journal.
A flurry of articles, primarily as rebuttals, appeared in American and British journals.
optimism was Walt Whitman's dominant attitude is based on the bravado and affirmations of his early journalism
Quarterly Journal of Speech 47 (1961): 169–172.Baskerville, Barnet.
In an 1847 journal entry Whitman suggests that the "soul or spirit transmits itself into all matter"
Flora MacDonald Denison edited the journal and wrote many of its articles; other notable contributors
, no journals devoted to Whitman's work appeared for the next couple of decades.
However, in 1979 the Birthplace Association began another journal, West Hills Review: A Walt Whitman
Journal.
Folsom took over sole editorship of the journal in 1990.
In his awareness of the power of photography and journalism to create desired identities, Whitman was
version of "Out of the Cradle" appeared in Clapp's weekly Saturday Press and Whitman was one of the journal's
Lectures on Phrenology) and clipping articles to save, including three from the American Phrenological Journal
Grass, titled "An English and American Poet," in the October 1855 issue of the American Phrenological Journal
During this time he wrote twenty poems, twenty-four short stories, a novel, and countless pieces of journalism
forms, in his major poetry.Whitman was weaned in the cut-and-thrust world of penny-press urban journalism
on slang sayings and provincialisms, and interviewed workmen, recording his findings in private journals
are simply carryovers from the language of moral reform which had characterized Whitman's early journalism
27 May, arriving in New York sometime in mid-June.Whitman wrote extensively in letters and in his journal
Southern Literary Journal 15 (1982): 91–100.Kolb, Deborah S. "Walt Whitman and the South."
Journal of English and Germanic Philology 55 (1956): 75–84.Traubel, Horace.
Journal of American Studies 5 (1971): 173–184.Erkkila, Betsy.
Journal of English Teaching Techniques 7 (1974): 14–21.Blodgett, Harold W.
English Journal 73 (1984): 26–27.Sealts, Merton M., Jr. "Melville and Whitman."
Edinburgh Review, Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, and the Westminster Review, a liberal Benthamite journal
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
by concern for white labor than by sympathy for slaves, a position he consistently held in his journalism
focus on phrenology and numerous other reform-related issues, Whitman also wrote for one of its journals
force in the woman's rights movement until her death in 1876 and the publisher/editor of the woman's journal
for homosexuality, see Jack Drescher, "A History of Homosexuality and Organized Psychoanalysis," Journal
Bronson Alcott, The Journals of Bronson Alcott , ed.
Walt's phrase "I sit and look out" is so characteristic in his journalism that Emory Holloway and Vernolian
Galley proofs of three reviews ( , The United States Review The American Phrenological Journal ) pasted
"From the American Phrenological Journal." [A]n English and an American Poet" 1855.
Shugg" from the Fifth Avenue Journal, 1872.
Phrenological Journal / United States Review / Ralph Waldo Emerson / & several autographs, mysteriously
They are: "An English and American Poet" from The American Phrenological Journal; "Walt Whitman and His