Essays

Wage Slavery and the Composition of Leaves of Grass: The "Talbot Wilson" Notebook

Author: Andrew C Higgins

  • Wage Slavery and the Composition of Leaves of Grass: The "Talbot Wilson" Notebook

    Essays

    Wage Slavery and the Composition of Leaves of Grass: The "Talbot Wilson" Notebook

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Abstract

Examines Whitman's "Talbot Wilson" notebook, recently recovered by the Library of Congress, and challenges the usual dating of the notebook in the 1840s, arguing instead that the poetic notes were written much closer to 1855; reassesses the significance of the notebook, "especially its statements about race and slavery," and argues that slavery "plays a very minor role in the notebook, that Whitman is far more concerned with issues of ownership and the soul, and that discussions of slavery, when they do appear, seem to be as much connected to working-class wage-slavery rhetoric as to Free Soil anti-chattel-slavery rhetoric."

How to Cite:

Higgins, A. C., (2002) “Wage Slavery and the Composition of Leaves of Grass: The "Talbot Wilson" Notebook”, Walt Whitman Quarterly Review 20(2), 53-77. doi: https://doi.org/10.13008/2153-3695.1701

Rights: Copyright © 2002 Andrew C Higgins

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Published on
01 Oct 2002
Peer Reviewed