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Walt Whitman's Songs of Male Intimacy and Love

Walt Whitman's Songs of Male Intimacy and Love

Live Oak, with Moss and ""Calamus

by Walt Whitman
Paperback
Publication Date: 01/04/2011

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In his 1859 "Live Oak, with Moss," Walt Whitman's unpublished sheaf of twelve poems on manly passion, the poet dreams of a city where men who love men can live and love openly. The revised "Live Oak, with Moss" poems became "Calamus," Whitman's cluster of poems on "adhesive" and manly love, comradeship, and democracy, in Leaves of Grass. Commemorating both the first publication of the "Calamus" poems and the little-known manuscript of notebook poems out of which the "Calamus" cluster grew, Whitman scholar Betsy Erkkila brings together in a single edition for the first time the "Live Oak, with Moss" poems, the 1860 "Calamus" poems, and the final 1881 "Calamus" poems. In addition to honoring the sesquicentennial of the "Calamus" cluster, she celebrates the ongoing legacy of Whitman's songs of manly passion, sex, and love.

The volume begins with Whitman's elegantly handwritten manuscript of the "Live Oak, with Moss" poems, printed side by side with a typeset transcription and followed by a facsimile of the 1860 version of the "Calamus" poems. The concluding section reprints the final version of the "Calamus" poems from the 1881 edition of Leaves of Grass. In an afterword, Erkkila discusses the radical nature of these poems in literary, sexual, and social history; the changes Whitman made in the "Live Oak" and "Calamus" poems in the post-Civil War and Reconstruction years; the literary, political, and other contests surrounding the poems; and the constitutive role the poems have played in the emergence of modern heterosexual and homosexual identity in the United States and worldwide. The volume closes with a selected bibliography of works that have contributed to the critical and interpretive struggles around Whitman's man-loving life.

One hundred and fifty years after Whitman's brave decision to speak publicly about a fully realized democracy, his country is still locked in a struggle over the rights of homosexuals. These public battles have been at the very center of controversies over the life, work, and legacy of Walt Whitman, America's (and the world's) major poet of democracy and its major singer of what he called "manly love" in all its moods. Together the poems in this omnibus volume affirm his creation of a radical new language designed to convey and affirm the poet's man love.
ISBN:
9781587299582
9781587299582
Category:
Poetry by individual poets
Format:
Paperback
Publication Date:
01-04-2011
Language:
English
Publisher:
University of Iowa Press
Country of origin:
United States
Pages:
182
Dimensions (mm):
216x129x12mm
Weight:
0.22kg
Walt Whitman

Walt Whitman (1819-1892) was a celebrated American poet, chiefly known for his controversial and highly original poetry collection Leaves of Grass. Born in 1819 on Long Island, he worked as a journalist, teacher, government clerk, and volunteer nurse during the Civil War.

Whitman published his seminal work in 1855 with his own money, soon becoming one of the world's most popular and influential poets. After suffering a stroke in 1873 he retired to Camden, New Jersey, where he died nineteen years later - just two months after the final edition of Leaves of Grass appeared on sale.

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