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19th-Century American Literature Videos 35 videos
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American Literature: Whit and Wisdom 2141 Views
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Description:
Introducing the father of free verse, the poet of patriotism, the world’s wittiest Walt… Mr. Whitman.
Transcript
- 00:04
whit and wisdom... its outline time....
- 00:30
I'm home, it feels good hanging out in my neck of the woods here in New York [Statue of Liberty]
- 00:36
City I'd like you to meet one of my fellow New Yorkers Walt Whitman growing
- 00:41
up in and around the Big Apple was a major influence on Walt's poetry in fact
- 00:45
he became a lover of all things American from a very young age his parents Walter
Full Transcript
- 00:50
and Louisa were huge fans of democracy they loved it so much that they even [Walter and Louisa standing together]
- 00:54
named three of their sons after their heroes George Washington Whitman Thomas
- 00:58
Jefferson Whitman and Andrew Jackson Whitman as for Walt he had a few
- 01:02
different nickname The Bard which also means poet of democracy the father of [Examples of Walt's nicknames]
- 01:06
free verse and the penner of perfect poetry okay so he did give himself that
- 01:12
last nickname the guy did not lack self-confidence he's known for having
- 01:16
fathered free verse poetry but what is this free verse stuff anyway free verse [Walt fathering free verse poetry baby]
- 01:21
poetry doesn't have a rhyme scheme or a meter so it can really take any form
- 01:25
well maybe not any form free verse opened up a whole new world for poets
- 01:30
they were no longer held back by tricky little things like rhyme scheme and
- 01:33
meter... Walt was so taken by free verse he wrote a whole collection of poetry using [Walt with free verse poetry books]
- 01:38
it leaves of grass was Walt's accomplishment of a lifetime even though
- 01:42
he published it for the first time when he was only 35 he kept revising and
- 01:45
changing it throughout his life you might think that a book with such a nice
- 01:49
title and all that revision work would see a million copies and what would be [People in a cue outside a store and Walt bathing in money]
- 01:53
rollin in the dough and you'd be wrong when leaves of grass was first published
- 01:58
Walt's boss Secretary of the Interior James Harlan fired Walt - he said
- 02:02
the book was morally offensive with poem titles like to a common prostitute and a
- 02:07
woman waits for me it was clear that Whitman wasn't scared to write about the
- 02:10
topic of sex he didn't just stick to sex between men and
- 02:14
women either in a song of myself and many of his other problems won't wrote
- 02:18
about love between two men plus Harlan wasn't the only one who didn't think
- 02:22
leaves of grass was all that great some people said it should have been burned [Newspaper page outlining leaves of grass should be burned]
- 02:26
instead of published the author should off himself it was a mass of stupid
- 02:32
filth! ouch, all of this uproar eventually led to leaves of grass being
- 02:36
banned...critics called it too sensual, shocking, obscene you really want to read
- 02:43
it now don't you these days those are the markers of a best-seller but in the
- 02:47
mid 1800s people were a bit more a conservative or racist and homophobic
- 02:51
gender biased pick your poison anyway walt was into men instead of being a [Walt with a young man]
- 02:57
ladies man folks in his day didn't look too kindly to this lifestyle so if you wish
- 03:01
to see the process in motion today take a little trip to Saudi Arabia it's time
- 03:05
to see what all the hubbub was really about we're going to check out one of
- 03:09
Walt's offensive poems called song of myself its pretty long so hit pause now [Song of myself poem on paper]
- 03:13
then go and read it go on I'll be right here when you get back okay song of
- 03:19
myself is a pretty long poem so let's jump in and take a closer look at this
- 03:23
thing let's start with the basics when reading poetry what are the key elements
- 03:27
we look for imagery, speaker an audience, rhythm and rhyme or the lack of these in
- 03:34
Walt's case and theme we're going to examine each of these poetry conventions [Elements of poetry listed on board]
- 03:39
in a bit more detail let's start with imagery what types of mental images are
- 03:44
we given in song of myself there are a lot so let's zoom in on a few key
- 03:48
examples the beginning of part two reads houses and rooms are full of perfumes
- 03:52
the shelves are crowded with perfumes I breathed the fragrance myself and know
- 03:57
it and liked it the distillation would intoxicate me also but I shall not let [Part 2 of Walt's song of myself poem]
- 04:03
it ah can't you just smell that perfume that was a lot of scent...
- 04:12
whitman speaker is drawn into the fragrance scene before him inhaling but
- 04:16
not letting himself become intoxicated section eight opens the little one
- 04:20
sleeps in its cradle I lift the gauze and look a long time and silently brush
- 04:25
away flies with my hand... doesn't that sound nice well minus the fies this is [Person draws back a gauze and a baby appears]
- 04:30
a peaceful scene marrying youth with age or experience the process of aging was a
- 04:35
big theme in a lot of Walt's work but more on this in a few the wild gander
- 04:39
lead his flock through the cool night ya-honk he says and sounds it down to
- 04:44
me like an invitation in this piece of imagery we see Walt passion for nature
- 04:48
coming through in verse the natural world and man's connection with it is [Ducks walking in the woods]
- 04:52
another theme we see time and again throughout Walt poetry from the three
- 04:57
images we examined we can tell that Walt really like perfume the dichotomy of youth
- 05:01
versus age or experience was often a theme in is poetry Whitman wrote a lot
- 05:06
about nature and how man is connected to it now we know a little bit more about [Examples of imagery in Walts poem]
- 05:10
song of myself but there's a lot more to discuss next up let's talk about Walt
- 05:15
speaker and the audience he had in mind when writing this poem the speaker of
- 05:19
song is well a tough nut to crack in section 24 the speaker just busts out [Hammer smashes a nut]
- 05:24
and says I'm Walt Whitman - no arguing with that one but instead of just being Walt
- 05:28
the poet the speaker of song is more like a supercharged version of Walt like [Walt takes sip of Diet Pepsi can]
- 05:33
Walt on too many candy bars and sodas the Walt of his wildest dreams sometimes
- 05:38
poets are really connected to their poetry but have to employ some shall we
- 05:41
say poetic license in order to get their point across so the speaker of song of
- 05:46
myself is Walt Whitman but it also isn't on to our audience who do you think Walt
- 05:51
wanted to read song of myself? was it A politician's, B other poets, C the
- 05:57
entire cast of the musical rent well to be honest Whitman probably hoped that
- 06:01
all these people would read his poem his audience was the poetry reading people
- 06:05
of the world next on our poetry analyzing docket we've got rhythm and [Rhythm and rhyme definitions explained]
- 06:08
rhyme as we mentioned before free verse poetry isn't nailed down by a set rhyme
- 06:12
scheme, meter or rhythm the structure of song of myself is free verse some
- 06:17
critics argue that Walt borrowed bits and pieces of other poets structure to [Walt throws poet books on the floor]
- 06:21
create his own but that's kinda sorta what free verse is all about in our
- 06:24
opinion fun fact the original version of song of
- 06:27
myself wasn't broken into sections like the one you just read moving on we've
- 06:31
got theme; like any good epic poem song of myself has several important themes
- 06:35
more than anything else it's really about the identity of one person how it
- 06:39
can be broken down into three separate selves that make up a single hole Walt [Walt with a satan and angel walt either side]
- 06:44
explores identity as it relates to the social and natural world around him both
- 06:48
companionship and sex are other themes connected to identity you can't have a
- 06:52
good poem without relatable themes am i right we spent enough time on one song [Statue of liberty discussing Walt's poem themes]
- 06:56
let's check out some more of Walt's work Walt, like pretty much everyone in
- 07:00
America was affected by the Civil War after his brother George was wounded in [George in battle and explosion occurs]
- 07:04
battle Walt took off from New York in search of him he ended up serving as a
- 07:07
sort of nurse in military hospitals for the next few years everything he saw
- 07:11
greatly shaped his writing and his life Walt suffered from extreme mental
- 07:16
exhaustion and had to return to New York before finally having a breakdown like a [Walt having a breakdown]
- 07:20
good poet should Walt wrote about his experiences with the soldiers in a
- 07:24
poetry called drum taps the themes from this collection all stemmed from his
- 07:28
experience during the war Walt said that the book was put together by fits and
- 07:32
starts on the fields in the hospitals as I worked with the soldier boys why don't
- 07:37
we check out a poem from this collection you're going to read Whitman beat! beat! [Beat! Beat! drums poem]
- 07:41
drums hit that old pause button while you check her out
- 08:08
alrighty let's talk themes, obviously this
- 08:15
poems about war even though the speaker never comes right out and says it we're
- 08:19
talking about the Civil War the war is everywhere in homes, churches, schools and [People in civil war lying on the ground]
- 08:24
in the cities Whitman uses one of his famous lists to describe all the places
- 08:28
and people that the war has touched in some way to go along with this theme we
- 08:31
get the theme of rules and order the war is disturbing the normal order of things
- 08:35
which we see in lines like burst like a force of armed men and mind not the old
- 08:41
man beseeching the young man there's that mention of age and wisdom again [Theme examples of Drum-taps]
- 08:45
Death is another major theme in the poem because you can't talk about war without
- 08:49
mentioning death the interesting thing is though that's all Whitman does he [Death with a scythe and people firing canons]
- 08:53
mentions death right at the end of the poem finally let's talk about the tone
- 08:57
of this poem what sort of atmosphere does Whitman create in this poem does it
- 09:01
make you feel cheerful, angry as can be, a little sad like maybe you want to write
- 09:06
some poetry if you said sad you're probably in the majority this poem might
- 09:10
have an upbeat cadence to it but it's not a happy one beat beat drums is
- 09:14
representative of all the work in drum taps good old-fashioned war poetry [Soldiers marching and banging drums]
- 09:19
written by a good old-fashioned American patriot you've now met Walt Whitman poet,
- 09:24
countryman, lover of men and women but not in the same way, nurse and book
- 09:29
author and controversial literary figure we shouldn't leave without saying [Leaf falls and gravestone of Walt appears]
- 09:33
farewell property that one gets me every time....
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