“[I]t is a word unsaid”

The Poet as a Namer in Walt Whitman’s “Song of Myself”

Authors

  • Amer Rasool Mahdi College of Education Ibn Rushd for Humanities

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.31973/aj.v1i126.3

Keywords:

Walt Whitman, act of naming, geo-poetics, America

Abstract

This study attempts to trace the aesthetic of the act of naming in Walt Whitman’s poem “Song of Myself”. It tries, furthermore, to approach America as a geo-poetic concept and formation in the earlier American poetics of being. The literary geography of Whitman’s poetry might here be measured against the poeticity of the American con(text) or poetic dwelling, with all the nuances of the question of identity being implicated. The poet as a namer is the one who re-invents his linguistic-poetic gear to re-signify his existence in the act of renaming the second creation. Building on the Emersonian pseudo-philosophical premises, the poet Whitman thus sets himself the task of mapping out his Eden, or this terra incognita, by creating his textual geography and by Whitmanizing the American scene for that matter. 

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Author Biography

  • Amer Rasool Mahdi, College of Education Ibn Rushd for Humanities

    Department of English, Asst. Prof. PhD.

References

Bedient, Calvin. 1987. “Walt Whitman.” In Voices and Visions: The Poet in America, edited by Helen Vendler, 3-50. New Delhi: Tata McGraw-Hill Publishing Company Ltd.

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Carlisle, Clare. 2003. “Nietzsche’s Beyond Good and Evil: ‘Why Insist on Truth?’” Richmond Journal of Philosophy 4: 1-7, & passim.
Emerson, Ralph Waldo. Emerson’s Essays. Introduction by Irwin Edman. New York: Apollo Editions, n.d.

Gosetti-Ferencei, Jennifer Anna. 2004. Heidegger, Hölderlin, and the Subject of Poetic Language: Toward a New poetics of Dasein. New York: Fordham University Press.

Hoffman, Tyler. 2006. “Language.” In A Companion to Walt Whitman, edited by Donald D. Kummings, 361-376. Oxford: Blackwell Publishing Ltd.

Holander, John. 2004. “Introduction to Leaves of Grass.” In The American Renaissance, edited by Harold Bloom, 259-272. New York: Chelsea House Publishers.

Thoreau, Henry David. 1974. The Maine Woods. Edited by Joseph Moldenhauer. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

Kockelmans, Joseph J. 1972. On Heidegger and Language. Evanston: Northwestern University Press.

Whicher, Stephen E. 1960. Selections from Ralph Waldo Emerson. Boston: Mifflin Company.

Whitman, Walt. 1959. Complete Poetry and Selected Prose. Edited by James E. Miller, Jr. Boston: Houghton Mifflin. All references to Whitman’s poetry and prose are taken from this edition.

Yoder, R.A. 1978. Emerson and the Orphic Poet in America. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press.

Published

2018-09-15

Issue

Section

English linguistics and literature

How to Cite

“[I]t is a word unsaid”: The Poet as a Namer in Walt Whitman’s “Song of Myself”. (2018). Al-Adab Journal, 1(126), 1-8. https://doi.org/10.31973/aj.v1i126.3

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