Stefan Schoeberlein is assistant professor of English and director of digital humanities at Marshall University, as well as a contributing editor to the Walt Whitman Archive.
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Description
"A racial reckoning, a failing romance, a literary awakening--New Orleans has long been pivotal in the myth making and speculation that have gone into accounts of Whitman's career. In Walt Whitman's New Orleans, Stefan Schoeberlein presents a reader's edition of the writings Whitman contributed to the city newspaper he helped found, the Daily Crescent. Through a range of methods, Schoeberlein establishes the poet's authorship of an expanded corpus of anonymous prose and thereby highlights an unfamiliar, light-hearted, and frequently humorous Whitman. The effect is eye-opening." --Kenneth M. Price, codirector of the Walt Whitman Archive and author of Whitman in Washington: Becoming the National Poet in the Federal City "Stefan Schoeberlein's revelatory book gives us newly found Whitman publications, work that deepens his association with New Orleans, the city he lived and worked in for only three months in 1848 but that arguably had a greater impact on him than any other place outside of Brooklyn and Manhattan. We have known about a fraction of these writings before, but now, with newly discovered sketches and with a wonderfully illuminating introduction by Schoeberlein, Whitman's work on the Crescent and his relationship with New Orleans shine brighter than ever." --Ed Folsom, codirector of the Walt Whitman Archive and editor-in-chief of the Walt Whitman Quarterly Review "This expertly edited and attractively illustrated volume sheds new light on Walt Whitman's brief but productive tenure at the Daily Crescent in the late 1840s. A special treat is its revelation of newly discovered newspaper pieces by Whitman." --David S. Reynolds, author of Walt Whitman's America: A Cultural Biography

