From the Archive
Issue 11
Whitman, Sex, and Gender
1989
Table of Contents
- “‘Now in a Moment I Know What I Am For’: Rituals of Initiaion in Whitman and Dickinson”
by Sandra M. Gilbert - “The Biographer’s Problem”
by Justin Kaplan - “Whitman’s Idea of Women”
Jerome M. Loving - “Death as Repression, Repression as Death: A Reading of Whitman’s ‘Calamus’ Poems”
by Vivian R. Pollak - “Whitman and Nineteenth-Century Views of Gender and Sexuality”
by David S. Reynolds - “Whitman and the Seduction of the Reader”
by William H. Shurr - “Strategies of Sex in Whitman’s Poetry”
by Louis Simpson
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Issue Credits
Mickle Street Review is sponsored and published by the Department of English at the Camden campus of Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey.
Click here for a PDF of the scholars, poets, and artists who contributed to this issue.
Initial archiving of issue completed on
August 09, 2006 by Evan RoskosVISIT THE
Original File Archive -
EDITOR
Geoffrey M. SillASSOCIATE EDITOR
David S. ReynoldsASSITANT EDITOR
Lisa TraceyCONTRIBUTING EDITOR
Donald Kummings
Jean Pearson
Howard Nelson
Denise BuzzART EDITOR
John Giannotti
Reprint Permissions
“Through the Windows at Walt’s” first appeared in Carolina Quarterly 38:1 (Fall 1985).
Part of the Camden Online Poetry Project.
Copyright | Rutgers University – Camden.
Supported in part by a grant from the
Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History.