UNIVERSALITY OF DEMOCRACY: WALT WHITMAN’S DEMOCRATIC VISTAS (original) (raw)
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Walt Whitman revealed affinities between coolness in the face of death and the character dispositions and sensibilities most conducive to democracy. Whitman articulated three visions of death in his antebellum work: the first and second sought to allay readers’ mortal anxiety by intimating the self’s material immortality; the third sought to encourage affirmation of death, even in the absence of spiritual or material immortality. All three were intended to promote affirmation of the self and the world as they are, and therefore rejection of the idea that the self and the world are fallen and need supernatural redemption. Affirmation of the self and the world as they are both signals and compounds the generosity of perception and spirit necessary for democratic culture, a culture wherein every individual regards every other individual as beautiful and sublime. While George Kateb, Morton Schoolman, and Jason Frank have helpfully elaborated this idea of democratic culture in Whitman, none has analyzed Whitman’s tripartite poetics of death and explained their crucial role in Whitman’s quest to inspire democratic culture. This essay takes up this task, in the hopes it can enhance our appreciation of the radicalism of Whitman’s democratic theory, a theory which not only acknowledges but also celebrates human finitude.
DEMOCRACTIC VEHEMENCE IN THE POETRY OF WHITMAN
Vijay Bhushan
Whitman was centrally concerned with the American experimentation in democracy and its influence to fabricate "out of many, one," even at as enormous cost as the Civil War and the irresolute reconstruction. Whitman is perhaps America"s first democratic poet. The free verse he espouses in his work reflects a newly adapted and accessible poetic language. His overarching themes-the individual, the nation, the body, the soul, and everyday life and work-mirror the primary values of America"s naissance. Then and now, his poetry is for everyone.