Leaves of Grass, 1860

Leaves of Grass 1860: The 150th Anniversary Facsimile Edition
By Walt Whitman; Edited by Jason Stacy

In May 1860, Walt Whitman published a third edition of Leaves of Grass. His timing was compelling. Printed during a period of regional, ideological, and political divisions, written by a poet intimately concerned with the idea of a United States as โ€œessentially the greatest poem,โ€ this new edition was Whitmanโ€™s last best hope for national salvation. Now available in a facsimile edition, Leaves of Grass, 1860 faithfully reproduces Whitmanโ€™s attempt to create a โ€œGreat construction of the New Bibleโ€ to save the nation on the eve of civil war and, for the first time, frames the book in historical rather than literary terms.

In his third edition, Whitman added 146 new poems to the 32 that comprised the second edition, reorganized the book into a bible of American civic religion that could be cited chapter and verse, and included erotic poetry intended to bind the nation in organic harmony. This 150th anniversary edition includes a facsimile reproduction of the original 1860 volume, a thought-provoking introduction by antebellum historian and Whitman scholar Jason Stacy that situates Whitman in nineteenth-century America, and annotations that provide detailed historical context for Whitmanโ€™s poems.

A profoundly rich product of a period when America faced its greatest peril, this third edition finds the poet transforming himself into a prophet of spiritual democracy and the Whitman we celebrate todayโ€”boisterous, barbaric, and benevolent. Reprinting it now continues the poetโ€™s goal of proclaiming for โ€œthe whole of America for each / individual, without exception . . . uncompromising liberty and equality.โ€

Publisher: University Of Iowa Press; 1st edition (September 1, 2009)
Language: โ€ŽEnglish
Paperback: โ€Ž550 pages
ISBN: 9781587298257

$24.95

In stock

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