WWQR > Vol. 21 (2003) > No. 3
Volume 21, Number 3 (2004)
Numbers Three/Four Winter/Spring 2004
Front Matter
Essays
The Texts and Contexts of "Calamus": Did Whitman Censor Himself in 1860? p. 109-130
Robert J. Scholnick
The Civil War as Revolutionary Reenactment: Walt Whitman's "The Centenarian's Story" p. 131-154
Edward Tang
Untying the Immigrant Tongue: Whitman and the "Americanization" of Anzia Yezierska p. 155-165
Wendy R. Katz
Discoveries
"Yesterday's Military Show": An Uncollected Piece of Whitman Journalism p. 166-172
Martin G. Murray
Reviews
Aspiz, Harold. So Long!: Walt Whitman's Poetry of Death [review] p. 173-175
William J. Scheick
Coghill, Sheila and Thom Tammaro, eds., Visiting Walt: Poems Inspired by the Life and Work of Walt Whitman [review] p. 175-177
Carmine Sarracino
Fletcher, Angus. A New Theory for American Poetry [review] p. 177-179
M. Jimmie Killingsworth
Katz, Jonathan Ned. Love Stories: Sex Between Men Before Homosexuality [review] p. 179-182
Ed Folsom
Bibliographies
Walt Whitman: A Current Bibliography p. 183-188
Ed Folsom
Announcements
In Memoriam: Robert Strassburg, 1915-2003 p. 189-191
Ed Folsom
Back Matter and Back Cover
About This Image
Whitman's Unpublished "Calamus" Poem, "Was it I who walked the earth ... "; see pp. 109-130. Walt Whitman Collection (#3829), Clifton Waller Barrett Library, Special Collections, University of Virginia Library.