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Analysis Of Walt Whitman 's ' Whitman ' And Bishop '

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ckenboss
Nora Burghardt
English 11 pd 2
2 May 2015
Exploration of the Individual in Whitman and Bishop

Walt Whitman and Elizabeth Bishop are two of the most highly acclaimed American poets of all time, exploring themes, scenes and emotions that deeply resonate with psyche of the American public. Whitman and Bishop explore the relationship between themselves and their audience by writing about the liminal space between individual and community. As renowned poetic voices for their country, the two are individuals speaking for the multitude. They are therefore fascinated with their apparent inability to determine what defines an individual within humanity, and it becomes clear through their writing that they are at times frightened …show more content…

For Whitman, this connective trait of humanity symbolized by grass allows him to transcend the individual, suffer with the his fellow American sufferers and celebrate with the celebratory. The ideal role of the narrator of Song of Myself is outlined in section 11. As the woman watches the 28 nude men from her window, she remains physically within her own home, but mentally escapes outside of it to engage with the group of men, as her “unseen hand also pass 'd over their bodies, It descended tremblingly from their temples and ribs” (212-213). She feels empowered by her invisibility to touch the men, but does so timidly, scared by the force of the reality of her imaginings. The erotic nature of the scene is also meaningful, as sex is often seen as a means of transcending the individual by the physical and emotional unification of two bodies. Whitman attempts to replicate the role of the woman in his position as narrator by imaginatively engaging in a scene, often within another body, but not interfering with the reality of the moment.
Although the narrator is the only character in the poem who explicitly transcends his body, Whitman makes it clear

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