WWQR > Vol. 2 (1984) > No. 1
Abstract
Examines a broad range of Whitman's prose--from his early journalism through Democratic Vistas and Specimen Days--and stresses how Whitman's "voices or visions alternate in his literary and cultural criticism"; concludes that in his prose Whitman "found a form to fit his microscopically attuned eye and his castigating voice--both of which had little, if any, place in his poetry."
Rights
Copyright © 1984 by The University of Iowa.
Recommended Citation
Pincus, Robert L.. "A Mediated Vision, a Measured Voice: Culture and Criticism in Whitman's Prose." Walt Whitman Quarterly Review 2 (Summer 1984), 22-31.
Available at: http://ir.uiowa.edu/wwqr/vol2/iss1/4
Season
Summer
COinS