Whitman among the Bohemians
ISBN: 9781609382933
Platform/Publisher: JSTOR / University of Iowa Press
Digital rights: Users: unlimited; Printing: chapter; Download: chapter



For several years just before and just after his 1860 edition ofnbsp; Leaves of Grassnbsp; appeared, Walt Whitman regularly frequented Pfaff's beer cellar in downtown Manhattan. The basement bar was the very center of mid-nineteenth-century American bohemian activity and was heavily patronized by writers, artists, musicians, actors, intellectuals, and radicals such as free-love advocate Henry Clapp, Jr., and Broadwaynbsp; succès de scandale nbsp;Adah Isaacs Menken. Numerous creative and political ventures emerged from this environment, and at least two bohemian literary weeklies,nbsp; The New-York Saturday Press nbsp;andnbsp; Vanity Fair , shared origins around the tables at Pfaff's.

In this milieu, Whitman found sympathetic supporters of his poetic vision, professional connections, rivals, romantic partners, and close friends, and left a lasting impression on poet and critic Edmund Clarence Stedman, an erstwhile bohemian who later in the century emerged as a tastemaker of American poetry. Yet for many years, the bohemians associated with Pfaff's have served merely as minor background characters in Whitman scholarship.nbsp; Whitman among the Bohemians nbsp;corrects that by exploring in depth the connections Whitman made at Pfaff's and the impact they had on him, his poetry, and his career. In telling the story of these intersecting social and professional links that converged at Pfaff's in the late 1850s and early 1860s, the essays in this volume powerfully demonstrate just how much we can learn about Whitman and his work by viewing him within the context of American bohemia.

CONTRIBUTORS:nbsp;Stephanie Blalock, Ruth Bohan, Leif Eckstrom, Logan Esdale, Amanda Gailey, Karen Karbiener, Joanna Levin, Mary Loeffelholz, Eliza Richards, Ingrid Satelmajer, Robert J. Scholnick, Edward Whitley

Joanna Levin is an associate professor of English at Chapman University. She is the author of Bohemia in America, 1858#150;1920 , winner of the 2010 Choice Outstanding Academic Title Award. She lives in Tustin, California. Edward Whitley is an associate professor of English at Lehigh University. He is the author of American Bards: Walt Whitman and Other Unlikely Candidates for National Poet and the coeditor of The Vault at Pfaff's , a digital archive about the bohemian writers and artists of antebellum New York. He lives in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania.
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