This book combines literary and historical analysis in a study of
sexuality in Walt Whitman's work. Informed by his "new historicist"
understanding of the construction of literary texts, Jimmie
Killingsworth examines the progression of Whitman's poetry and
prose by considering the textual history of
Leaves of Grass
and other works.
Killingsworth demonstrates that Whitman's "poetry of the body"
derives its radical power from the transformation of conventional
attitudes toward sexuality, traditional poetics, and conservative
politics. The sexual relation, with its promise of unity, love,
equality, interpenetration, and productivity for partners, becomes
a metaphor for all political and social relationships, including
that of poet and reader. The effect of the poems is protopolitical,
an altering of consciousness about the body's relation to other
bodies, a shifting of the categories of knowledge that foretells
political action.
Killingsworth traces the interplay in Whitman's poetry between
sexual and textual themes that derive from Whitman's political
response to the historical turbulence of mid-century America. He
describes a subtle shift in Whitman's prose writings on poetics,
which turn from a view of poetry in the early 1850s as morally and
politically efficacious to a chastened romanticism in the postwar
years that frees the poet from responsibility for the world outside
his poems.
Later editions of
Leaves of Grass are marked by the poet's
deliberate repression of erotic themes in favor of a depoliticized
aestheticism that views art not as a motivator of political and
moral action but as an artifact embodying the soul of the
genius.