Walt Whitman - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Walt Whitman

Description:

Walt Whitman The first American poet. Who is Walt Whitman? Born: May 31st, 1819 in West Hills, Long Island The second of nine children (he has three brothers named ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:394
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 22
Provided by: WUCHI8
Category:
Tags: andrew | jackson | walt | whitman

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Walt Whitman


1
Walt Whitman
  • The first American poet.

2
Who is Walt Whitman?
  • Born May 31st, 1819 in West Hills, Long Island
  • The second of nine children (he has three
    brothers named after American leaders George
    Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Andrew Jackson)
  • Family has financial difficulty which results in
    moving around New York quite a bit
  • Begins work after finishing formal schooling at
    age eleven
  • Whitman is a printers apprentice and
    occasionally writes filler material for the paper

3
Who is Walt Whitman?
  • After some early work writing articles, editing
    and publishing newspapers, and writing editorials
    Whitman decides to move into poetry.
  • He is determined to produce an American Epic and
    comes up with Leaves of Grass
  • Following the publication of his epic in 1855 he
    is declared Americas first poet

4
Leaves of Grass
  • 1855
  • 1856
  • 1860
  • 1867
  • 1872
  • 1876
  • 1881
  • 1892

5
But why is Whitman the first American poet?
  • Whitman is considered the first American poet
    because he breaks from the traditional style and
    form of poetry readers were accustomed to.
  • Despite the Revolution and the general ill
    feelings toward Great Britain, the most widely
    read literature at the time was still British
    titles and authors.

6
Who loves Walt Whitman?
  • Ralph Waldo Emerson, in a letter to Whitman
    after the first publication of Leaves of Grass,
    had this to say
  • I find Leaves of Grass the most extraordinary
    piece of with wisdom that America has yet
    contributedI greet you at the beginning of a
    great career, which yet must have had a long
    foreground somewhere, for such a start.

7
Everybodys Got An Opinion
  • "...but I confess that I extract no poison from
    these Leaves - to me they have brought only
    healing." -Fanny Fern, critic and popular
    essayist
  • "Foul work" filled with "libidinousness." The
    Christian Examiner "There are too many persons,
    who imagine they demonstrate their superiority to
    their fellows, by disregarding all the
    politenesses and decencies of life, and,
    therefore, justify themselves in indulging the
    vilest imaginings and shamefullest license."
    -Rufus Griswold, The Criterion

8
The Father of Free Verse
  • Marking a huge break from tradition and the
    accepted form of poetry, Whitman uses the Free
    Verse (no formal rhyme scheme, meter, or musical
    pattern) form of poetry throughout Leaves of
    Grass
  • Whitmans poetry was obviously different from the
    work of his contemporaries in1855
  • The next two slides compare a poem by Robert
    Browning and Whitman

9
Childe Roland to the Dark Tower Came by Robert
Browning, 1855
  • VI.
  • While some discuss if near the other graves
  • Be room enough for this, and when a day
  • Suits best for carrying the corpse away,
  • With care about the banners, scarves and staves
  • And still the man hears all, and only craves
  • He may not shame such tender love and stay.

10
Ones-Self I Sing by Walt Whitman, 1855
  • Ones-self I sing, a simple separate person,
  • Yet utter the word Democratic, the word En-Masse.
  • Of physiology from top to toe I sing,
  • Not physiognomy alone nor brain alone is worthy
    for the Muse,
  • I say the Form complete is worthier far,
  • The Female equally with the Male I sing.
  • Of life immense in passion, pulse, and power,
  • Cheerful, for freest action formd under the laws
    divine,
  • The Modern Man I sing.

11
Common Themes
  • Transcendent power of love, brotherhood, and
    comradeship
  • Imaginative projection into others lives
  • Optimistic faith in democracy and equality
  • Belief in regenerative and illustrative powers of
    nature, its value as a teacher
  • (Who does this sound like?)

12
Democratic Poetry
  • The equal representation of all peoples in
    literature, men, women, white, black
  • Whitmans poetry is addressed to and is about
    everybody
  • He celebrates the diversity of America

13
Whitmans Poetic Techniques
  • Free verse lack of metrical regularity and
    conventional rhyme
  • Use of repeated images, symbols, phrases, and
    grammatical units
  • Use of enumerations and catalogs
  • Contrast and parallelism in paired lines

14
Later Life
  • Whitmans later life is devoted equally to his
    poetry and public service
  • He publishes Leaves of Grass with added sections
    including Drum Taps (which deals with his Civil
    War nursing experiences) and later editions
    include his famous odes to President Lincoln (O
    Captain My Captain, When Lilacs Last in the
    Doorway Bloomd)
  • In his later years Whitman works for several
    government offices (he is denied one government
    job because he is the author of the
    "objectionable poetry collection" Leaves of
    Grass) and spends time as a hospital nurse caring
    for Civil War soldiers

15
Later Life
  • He spends a lot of time taking care of his family
    members (he commits a brother, buries another)
  • After suffering a paralytic stroke he retires
    and spends his remaining years in Camden, New
    Jersey living with his brother George. The final
    edition of Leaves of Grass is referred to as the
    deathbed edition.
  • Whitman is buried in a mausoleum shaped like a
    house that he designed himself. He would often
    visit it during its construction.

16
  • "The great poet of America so far."
  • -Andrew Carnegie

17
  • Free Verse Poetry - a form of poetry which
    refrains from which refrains from meter patterns,
    rhyme, or any other musical pattern
  • Example I Hear America Singing (pg 352 of your
    book)

18
  • Found Poetry poetry created by taking words,
    phrases, and sometimes whole passages from other
    sources and reframing them as poetry by making
    changes in spacing and/or lines, or by altering
    the text by additions and/or deletions
  • ExampleGuns Ammo

19
  • Concrete Poetry poetry in which the
    typographical arrangement of words is as
    important in conveying the intended effect as the
    conventional elements of the poem
  • Example

20
  • Limerick a five line poem in anapestic or
    amphibrachic meter with a strict rhyme scheme
    (aabba), which intendes to be witty or humorous,
    and is sometimes obscene with humorous intent
  • Example
  • The limerick packs laughs anatomical
  • In space that is quite economical,
  • But the good ones I've seen
  • So seldom are clean,
  • And the clean ones so seldom are comical.

21
List Poetry
  • The writer is telling you something--pointing
    something out--saying, "Look at this" or, "Think
    about this."
  • There's a beginning and an end to it, like in a
    story.
  • Each item in the list is written the same way.
  • They rarely rhyme.
  • And it is fun to juxtapose things that seem
    non-sequential fruits and meats, nuts and dairy,
    big picture to little flower.
  • List poems have a layering effect.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com