Die Your Own Death

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A01=Jack Turner
Agnosticism
Antebellum
Anxiety
Atoms
Audience
Author_Jack Turner
Authoritative
Authoritative tutelage
Authority
Baldwin
Category=DS
Category=JPHV
Category=NH
Category=QDTS
Citizenship
Civil
Condition
Death
Democracy
Democratic
Domination
Drum
Drum taps
Endurance
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Equality
Existence
Existential
Finitude
forthcoming
Freedom
Generations
Government
Grass
Identity
Immortal
Immortalism
Immortalist
Immortality
Imperial
Indigenous
Leaves grass
Literature
Lucretius
Memoranda
Metaphysical
Mortal
Mortal anxiety
Mortalism
Mortalist
Mortality
Nationality
Philosophy
Pioneers
Poetic
Racial
Rebel
Reconciliation
Reconciliationism
Reconstruction
Resentment
Sacrifice
Scented herbage
Secession
Selves
Slaves
Soldiers
Sought
Spiritual
Stanza
Suffrage
Supremacist
Supremacy
Tutelage
Vistas
Westward
Whitman

Product details

  • ISBN 9780691288840
  • Dimensions: 140 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Sep 2026
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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How Walt Whitman’s philosophy of death prepares the soul for freedom and equality

Humans fantasize about immortality. Billionaires dabble in cryonics, politicians build monuments to themselves, and writers donate their papers to libraries. In Die Your Own Death, Jack Turner argues that the quest for immortality—literal or symbolic—is politically destructive. He does so through a meditation on the work of Walt Whitman. Whitman held that democracy prepares individuals to “die their own deaths”—free of fear, resentment, and illusion. In Whitman’s “existential democracy,” accepting death strengthens freedom and equality. And yet, Turner finds, Whitman only half succeeded in forging a democratic philosophy of death. As Whitman’s thought evolved in response to changing ideas about nation, race, and empire, he encouraged citizens to seek immortality through racial imperialism—the expansion of white empire from North America to the Pacific Islands—as a monument to American greatness.

Turner explores the poetics of death in Leaves of Grass and its relationship to Whitman’s democratic theory (“I exist as I am, that is enough”). Through a close analysis of Drum-Taps and Memoranda During the War, Turner shows that Whitman sought to redeem the mass slaughter of the Civil War by cloaking it in poetic and national glory. And in Whitman’s greatest prose work, Democratic Vistas, Turner argues, Whitman envisioned an antidemocratic national immortalism that ignored Native sovereignty and Black equality. Turner exposes the dark side of Whitman’s philosophy of death, but he also reveals how that philosophy can still be a resource in the ongoing struggle for freedom and equality.

Jack Turner is professor of political science at the University of Washington, author of Awakening to Race: Individualism and Social Consciousness in America, and coeditor of African American Political Thought: A Collected History.

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