Talk:Walt Whitman
|
It seems perverse to link Jesse Jackson to Walt Whitman in these terms (traces). Jesse is working entirely out of the rhetorical tradition of Black Protestantism. James Weldon Johnson, on the other hand, may well (I might even go so far as 'probably does') represent a merging of Whitman and that tradition. --MichaelTinkler
It was an intuitive leap on my part to carry the link to Jackson. It may be wrong but I do not think it is perverse. The kind of almost hypnotic repition used by Whitman and so favored by black preachers evolved, I think, into an art form in the 1870's and 80's (JWJ took inspiration from the published sermons of those days), and it may be that Whitman picked up some of his cadence from the preachers and they from him. --Red Bowen
I have retracted the use of Jackson as too much of a stretch. --Red
It'd be good to have some discussion of Whitman's relationship to Emerson and the transcendentalists. Atorpen
Me Imperturbe