Containing Multitudes: Walt Whitman and the British Literary Tradition
Autor Gary Schmidgallen Limba Engleză Hardback – 8 ian 2015
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780199374410
ISBN-10: 0199374414
Pagini: 400
Ilustrații: 7 halftones
Dimensiuni: 234 x 165 x 36 mm
Greutate: 0.66 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0199374414
Pagini: 400
Ilustrații: 7 halftones
Dimensiuni: 234 x 165 x 36 mm
Greutate: 0.66 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
Written in limpid prose that welcomes readers, Containing Multitudes offers a uniquely telling examination of what Whitman made of poetry from Great Britain. Gary Schmidgall's deft and detailed readings illuminate how thoroughly Whitman interacted with canonical authors from Shakespeare and Milton to Burns, Wordsworth, and Tennyson.
A comprehensive account of Whitman's surprisingly rich engagement with British poetry, Schmidgall looks beyond Whitman's nationalistic bluster to recover a poet who wrestled with the legacies of Shakespeare and Milton as well as figures such as Burns, Blake, and Wordsworth. Containing Multitudes not only tracks lines of influence, it seeks out resonances between Whitman's career and those of precursor poets, and suggests the importance of British poetry to nineteenth-century American culture writ large.
Containing Multitudes describes not only Walt Whitman's many profound and often hidden literary influences, but also Gary Schmidgall's achievement here. His capacious study is remarkably learned and audacious. In digging up Whitman's buried British treasures, Schmidgall decisively alters our understanding of the poet and even makes one wonder if the treasures were hidden so as to be discovered-not obliterating but clarifying Whitman's American difference.
Written with brio, this important reappraisal presses well beyond limiting concerns with 'influence' to reveal undiscovered depths of imaginative affinity between Whitman and a number of prominent writers from the British literary tradition. Conclusions revelatory in character and grounded in solid scholarship are here advanced with a disarming adroitness of touch. The result is sensitive illumination of neglected major dimensions of Whitman's creative sensibility.
Eloquently written and provocative, Containing Multitudes demonstrates the myriad ways in which Whitman was indebted to and in dialogue with a British literary tradition. In telling chapters on Shakespeare, Milton, Burns, Blake, and Wordsworth, Schmidgall deftly analyzes the numerous echoes and divergences between these prior poets' lyrics and Whitman's verse. This book will be required reading for anyone interested in the subtle ways in which the British poetic canon was transmitted through one of America's most original and influential poets.
A comprehensive account of Whitman's surprisingly rich engagement with British poetry, Schmidgall looks beyond Whitman's nationalistic bluster to recover a poet who wrestled with the legacies of Shakespeare and Milton as well as figures such as Burns, Blake, and Wordsworth. Containing Multitudes not only tracks lines of influence, it seeks out resonances between Whitman's career and those of precursor poets, and suggests the importance of British poetry to nineteenth-century American culture writ large.
Containing Multitudes describes not only Walt Whitman's many profound and often hidden literary influences, but also Gary Schmidgall's achievement here. His capacious study is remarkably learned and audacious. In digging up Whitman's buried British treasures, Schmidgall decisively alters our understanding of the poet and even makes one wonder if the treasures were hidden so as to be discovered-not obliterating but clarifying Whitman's American difference.
Written with brio, this important reappraisal presses well beyond limiting concerns with 'influence' to reveal undiscovered depths of imaginative affinity between Whitman and a number of prominent writers from the British literary tradition. Conclusions revelatory in character and grounded in solid scholarship are here advanced with a disarming adroitness of touch. The result is sensitive illumination of neglected major dimensions of Whitman's creative sensibility.
Eloquently written and provocative, Containing Multitudes demonstrates the myriad ways in which Whitman was indebted to and in dialogue with a British literary tradition. In telling chapters on Shakespeare, Milton, Burns, Blake, and Wordsworth, Schmidgall deftly analyzes the numerous echoes and divergences between these prior poets' lyrics and Whitman's verse. This book will be required reading for anyone interested in the subtle ways in which the British poetic canon was transmitted through one of America's most original and influential poets.
Notă biografică
Gary Schmidgall is Professor of English at Hunter College at the City University of New York. His books include Shakespeare and Opera (OUP, 1990), The Stranger Wilde (Dutton, 1994) Walt Whitman: A Gay Life (Dutton, 1997), and Intimate with Walt: Selections from Whitman's Conversations with Horace Traubel, 1882-1892 (University of Iowa Press, 2001).