Walt Whitman''s Selected Journalism
English
Walt Whitmans Selected Journalism covers Whitmans early years as a part-time editorialist and ambivalent schoolteacher between 1838 and 1841. After 1841, it follows his work as a dedicated full-time newspaperman and editor, most prominently at the New York Aurora and the Brooklyn Daily Eagle between 1842 and 1848. After 1848 and up to the Civil War, Whitmans journalism shows his slow transformation from daily newspaper editor to poet. This volume gathers journalism from throughout these early years in his career, focusing on reporting, reviews, and editorials on politics and democratic culture, the arts, and the social debates of his day. It also includes some of Whitmans best early reportage, in the form of the short, personal pieces he wrote that aimed to give his readers a sense of immediacy of experience as he guided them through various aspects of daily life in Americas largest metropolis.
Over time, journalisms limitations pushed Whitman to seek another medium to capture and describe the world and the experience of America with words. In this light, todays readers of Whitman are doubly indebted to his career in journalism. In presenting Whitman-the-journalist in his own words here, and with useful context and annotations by renowned scholars, Walt Whitmans Selected Journalism illuminates for readers the future poets earliest attempts to speak on behalf of and to the entire American republic. See more