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But the expansion of slavery was not the only issue that inclined Whitman's journalism toward the Republican
Politics Journal of American History 2023 110 3 419–48 Lause, Mark A.
University Press 2009 Zakaras, Alex Nature, Religion, and the Market in Jacksonian Political Thought Journal
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
studies: much attention and time has been dedicated to investigating the lives, correspondence, journals
research at the Agnone li- brary, Baldassarre Labanca, to which Gamberale bequeathed his books, journals
these four pieces in the column “Tra libri e riviste” and with other occa- 4 sional articles, the journal
The article appeared in the journal Studi Americani 7 (Roma: Edizioni di Storia e Letteratura,1961):43
Bazalgette had published the review in the Parisian literary journal La Phalange 3, no.28(October15,1908
“TheRepublicanPartyaNationalParty,”Albany(NY)Evening Journal,November3,1855,p.2,col.3. 56.
“Address,oftheWorkingMenofPittsburgh,toTheirFellowWork- ingMen,inPennsylvania,”Huntingdon(PA)Journal,
perhapsbecauseofsubsequenteditionsofGriswold’santhology.See,for instance,“TheLaborer,”Kennebec(ME)Journal
“TheFourth,”NewYorkDailyTribune,July1,1854,p.4,col.3. 23.ByaLady,“TheOldThirteen,”BattleCreek(MI)Journal
“TheCampaignOpened,”Fremont(OH)Journal,June27,1856,p.2, col.5 36.“ComeatYourCountry’sCall!”
articles which follow constitute a curated selection of these writings and a thematic addition to the journalism
We consulted The Complete Writings of Walt Whitman: The Journalism , Vols. 1 (1998) and 2 (2003) to make
In his journal, Bronson Alcott will describe the Thoreau-Whitman encounter: "Each seemed planted fast
WJ Walt Whitman, The Journalism, ed. Herbert Bergman, 2 vols. (New York: Peter Lang, 1998–2003).
Advertising itself as “the acknowledged journal of the beau monde, the Court Journal of our democratic
English Journal 26 (1937): 48–52. Arendt, Hannah. The Human Condition.
American Journal of Sociology 84 (Supplement, 1987): S212–S247. Sommer, Doris.
The Journalism. Ed. Herbert Bergman. 2 vols. New York: Peter Lang, 1998–2003. ———.
Emily Dickinson Journal 5, no. 2 (1996): 240–246. ———.
Leviathan: A Journal of Melville Studies 14, no. 1 (2012): 9–23.
ESQ: A Journal of the American Renaissance 59, no. 1 (2013): 48–78.
American Art Journal 18 (Autumn 1986): 77. Wilson, Edmund.
Her previous work has appeared in the Journal of Design History and the European Journal of American
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.
Courier-Journal a notice of the death of Walt Whitman a Poet.
In 1880, Publishers’ Weekly settled in as the trade journal of record.
Entry of 6 August 1851, Henry David Thoreau, A Year in Thoreau’s Journal: 1851, ed. H.
William Moss, “Walt Whitman in Dixie,” Southern Literary Journal 22.2 (Spring 1990): 98–118.
Alexander Posey, Lost Creeks: Collected Journals, ed.
Museum History Journal 5, no. 1 (2012): 7–28. Barthes, Roland.
Emily Dickinson Journal 10, no. 2 (2001): 1–21. ———.
Journal of Neurology, Neuro- surgery and Psychiatry 75 (2004): 381.
Journal of Social History 22, no. 3 (1989): 507–30. Strauss, Jonathan.
Buinicki Walt Whitman’s Selected Journalism, edited by Douglas A.
York Aurora The New York Aurora was a mid-sized Democratic newspaper among many other political journals
We have also consulted The Complete Writings of Walt Whitman: The Journalism, Vol. 1 (1998) to help us
The publication of the story in the August 1841 issue of the journal seems to mark the beginning of the
journal's extended publishing relationship with Whitman and the official start of his fiction-writing
For Whitman's contributions to the New York Aurora , see " Whitman's Journalism ."
Introduction to The Collected Writings of Walt Whitman: The Journalism . Vol. 1: 1834–1846.
Margaret Fuller's New York Journalism: A Biographical Essay and Key Writings .
introduction is adapted from Jason Stacy, Walt Whitman's Multitudes: Labor Reform and Persona in Whitman's Journalism
the labeling method employed by Herbert Bergman in The Collected Writings of Walt Whitman: The Journalism
Knopf 1995 Walt Whitman The Collected Writings of Walt Whitman: The Journalism, Volume 1: 1834-1846 Herbert
A handful of the interviews may be familiar to scholars from reprintings in scholarly journals or from
It was the first of nine Whitman short stories that were published for the first time in the journal—the
The journal also published Whitman's "A Dialogue [Against Capital Punishment]" (November 1845) and, later
The Democratic Review 's prestige may help explain why two stories published in the journal—" Death in
It was the second of nine Whitman short stories that were published for the first time in the journal—the
The journal also published Whitman's "A Dialogue [Against Capital Punishment]" (November 1845) and, later
It was the seventh of nine Whitman short stories that were published for the first time in the journal—the
The journal also published Whitman's "A Dialogue [Against Capital Punishment]" (November 1845) and, later
The Democratic Review 's prestige may help explain why two stories published in the journal—" Death in
, 1846, "A Legend of Life and Love," with the shortened beginning, was reprinted in the Stanstead Journal
See "A Legend of Life and Love," Stanstead Journal , August 13, 1846, [1].
It was the fourth of nine Whitman short stories to appear in the journal—the eight others being " Death
The journal also published Whitman's "A Dialogue [Against Capital Punishment]" (November 1845) and, later
A Fact." in the journal.
The Democratic Review 's prestige may help explain why two stories published in the journal—" Death in
The tale was even reprinted in the British journal The Great Western Magazine and Anglo-American Journal
It was the fifth of nine Whitman short stories that were published for the first time in the journal—the
The journal also published "A Dialogue [Against Capital Punishment]" (November 1845) and, later, a review
A Fact." in the journal.
The Democratic Review 's prestige may help explain why two stories published in the journal—" Death in
Brasher, the journal published the story a second time without change in November 1851.
It was the sixth of nine short stories that were published for the first time in the journal—the eight
The journal also published Whitman's "A Dialogue [Against Capital Punishment]" (November 1845) and, later
It was the third of nine Whitman short stories that were published for the first time in the journal—the
The journal also published Whitman's "A Dialogue [Against Capital Punishment]" (November 1845) and, later
Whitman's writings, including his journalism and his later poetry, emphasized the lives of the "urban
The American Review was a monthly journal published in New York and edited by George H.
The circulation of the journal was "three to five thousand at any given time."
The introduction to the journal's opening issue sheds light on the political position of the Whig party
Noverr, "Journalism," in A Companion to Walt Whitman , ed. Donald D.
There are several notable reprintings of "The Death of Wind-Foot" in both newspapers and journals.
story and changing the title to "The Boy-Lover" before sending it to The American Review: A Whig Journal
It was one of nine Whitman short stories that were published for the first time in the journal—the eight
The journal also published Whitman's "A Dialogue [Against Capital Punishment]" (November 1845) and, later
In 1854, the story was reprinted in London in The Lamp: a weekly Catholic journal of politics, literature
In February 1843, the Journal of the American Temperance Union announced that the papers had merged,
See Journal of the American Temperance Union , February 1843, 27.
It was one of nine Whitman short stories to appear in the journal—the eight others being " Death in the
A Fact," was published, and he was twenty-four when the journal printed "Revenge and Requital."
The journal also published Whitman's "A Dialogue [Against Capital Punishment]" (November 1845) and, later
See Jason Stacy, Walt Whitman's Multitudes: Labor Reform and Persona in Whitman's Journalism and the
Whitman also reprinted " The Death of Wind-Foot " and " The Boy-Lover " in The American Review: A Whig Journal
Union (New York, NY) reprinted it on December 19, 1846, in the "Youth's Department" section of the journal
it for publication to The United States Magazine and Democratic Review , the prestigious literary journal
also reprinted " The Death of Wind-Foot " and " The Boy-Lover " in the The American Review: A Whig Journal
While completing research for the two volumes of journalism that were published as part of The Collected
Bergman, Douglas Noverr, and Edward Recchia, eds., The Collected Writings of Walt Whitman: The Journalism
"A Fireman's Dream" was also reprinted in Bergman's collection of Whitman's journalism.
See Bergman et al., The Journalism , 1:183. No other reprints of the story have been discovered.
first published with the title "The Boy-Lover" in the May 1845 issue of The American Review: A Whig Journal
The American Review was a monthly journal edited by George H.
The circulation of the journal was "three to five thousand at any given time."
The introduction to the journal's opening issue sheds light on the political position of the Whig party
"The Boy-Lover" Walter Whitman The Boy-Lover American Review: A Whig Journal of Politics, Literature,
See Bergman, et al., The Journalism , 1:87.
See Bergman, et al., The Journalism , 1:90.
Like Whitman's other fiction and journalism that he was publishing at the time, the novel represents
The Collected Writings of Walt Whitman: The Journalism, Volume I (1834–1846) .
Quarterly Journal of Studies on Alcohol 11.3 (September 1950): 410–451. Mitchell, Alexander.
Evans (1842); his short fiction; his unpublished prose manuscripts; and the early notebooks and his journalism
, was actually reprinted at least seventy-one times, including on the front page of the Stanstead Journal
Whitman's 15 correspondence, his poetry manuscripts, periodical printings of his poetry, and his journalism
make merry work': Transcribe Bentham and Manuscript Collections," forthcoming in The International Journal
available at https://scalablereading.northwestern.edu/ 14 Jerome McGann, "The Future is Digital," Journal
Emily Dickinson Journal 14.2 (2005): 10 3–19. Ashworth, William.
Emily Dickinson Journal 15.1 (2006): 56–78. ———.
Emily Dickinson Journal 20.1 (2011): 1–21. Glotfelty, Cheryll.
Emily Dickinson Journal 13.2 (2004): 1–26. Hutchinson, George.
Emily Dickinson Journal 18.1 (2009): 22–31. Wilson, Anthony.
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.
queer politics, see Paul Outka, “Whit- man and Race (‘He’s Queer, He’s Unclear, Get Used to It’),” Journal
.1 As we unearth moremanuscripts,aswekeepdiscoveringmorereportedconver- sations, as more of his journalism
A Critical Race Feminist View of Internet Identity-Shifting,” Journal of Gen- der, Race & Justice, May
Hayes, hired Whitman for his knowledgeof northeastern journalism.
For more, see Ivy G.Wilson, “Organic Com- pacts and the Logic of Social Cohesion,” ESQ: A Journal of
Outing: A Journal of Recreation
Home Journal
Albany Evening Journal Albany, NY August 6, 1841 [2] W. W. Death in the School-Room. A Fact.
The Journal Huntingdon, PA September 1, 1841 [1] W. W.
Sunbury American and Shamokin Journal Sunbury, PA September 11, 1841 [1] W. W.
A Legend of Life and Love Albany Evening Journal Albany, NY July 8, 1842 [2] W. W.
Whitman Death of Wind-Foot Northern Journal Lowville, NY July 31, 1845 [1] W.
Wells (1820–1875) published Life Illustrated: A Journal of Entertainment, Improvement, and Progress between
1854 and 1861, after which the newspaper merged with the American Phrenological Journal .
The journal also printed Emerson’s famous letter to Whitman that began "I greet you at the beginning
historic newspapers, for example, should not assume that they represent a complete record of past journalism
Ironically, Whitman’s own notebooks, poems, and journalism challenged the claim that the war could not
were published by New York University Press; Peter Lang published two volumes of Whitman’s early journalism
shortcomings: Whitman’s correspondence was brilliantly edited but offered only outgoing letters; the journalism
of the mass of soldiers marching—“good looking hardy young men” filling the streets—and, as his journals
Even literary journals like the Atlantic Monthly saw theircirculation growas theircontent shifted towar
In transferring his naturewritings from his journals and from the subsequent periodical publications,
“The Nineteenth-Century Origins of Modern American Journalism.”
Journal of the Early Republic 23, no. 3 (Autumn, 2003): 381–419.
Bowers published the originalnumberedversionofthe“liveoak,withmoss” poems in his journal, Studies in
Journal of Homosexuality 55 (2008): 648–64. 8.
Journal of Homosexuality 55 (2008): 648–64. Cocks, Harry.
Yale Journal of Criticism 6 (ll 1993): 29–62. o lsen-Smith, Steven.
manuscripts and periodical printings of Whitman's poetry were never collected, and the long-promised journalism
Peter Lang eventually published two volumes of the journalism in 1998 and 2003, though these volumes
at UNL celebrating the bicentennial of Whitman's birth. 2020: prose manuscripts. 2022: complete journalism
Suddenly the many years he spent with his journals writing about astronomy, religion, and linguistics
“WaltWhitman’sPoeticManuscripts.”WestHillsReview: A Walt Whitman Journal 2 (Fall 1980): 35–36.
Quarterly Journal of the Library of Congress 27 (1970): 109–11.
Journal of American Studies 38 (April 2004): 1–22. Hedge,Eleanor.
Art Journal 40 (1980): 345–47. Schmidgall, Gary. “1855: A Stop-Press Revision.”