-
Recent Posts
- Reading Between the Strike-Outs: Moments of Agency in Hannah Crafts’ Revisions
- The Liminality of Illness in The Blithedale Romance
- Billiards and Utopics
- Constructing Places of Agency: Melville’s “Benito Cereno” and Peter Coddle’s Trip to New York
- Constructing the Intimate: Places of Pleasure in “Songs of Myself” and Venus in Boston
Recent Comments
nuancednadia on Constructing the Intimate: Pla… theparisreviewblog on Constructing the Intimate: Pla… Archives
Categories
Meta
Tag Archives: grotesque
Constructing the Intimate: Places of Pleasure in “Songs of Myself” and Venus in Boston
The idea of place, in both the abstract and physical sense of the word, has been at the forefront of our class discussions. It also seems to be the connecting thread between Walt Whitman’s “Songs of Myself” and George Thompson’s … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged 19th century, analysis, george thompson, grotesque, intimacy, literature, pleasure, questions, self, venus in boston, walt whitman, whitman, writing
2 Comments