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an attitude of Southern nationalism
12019-07-12T12:18:24+00:00Joelle Thomas0feb3b2b7a8befeee2c7d2d710d303ed9677214113Cohen page 8plain2019-07-15T10:28:53+00:00Christopher Hagerccc5486c10317faa3407216a45842d5450a4165cThe letter expresses an attitude of Southern nationalism that would not read so weirdly if it were not being performed for Walt Whitman—indeed, occasioned by him and then put partly into his own words. Like this one, Johnson’s other letters to Whitman often form a dialogue, woven out of the strands of Johnson’s visions and Whitman’s poetry and prose. Johnson’s point, across his correspondence with the author, is that Whitman’s idea about freedom, his linking of personal liberation and national identity, is what Johnson is drawing on to parse his own relationships to the South and to the United States in the wake of the war and its economic devastation. Johnson frequently expressed his feelings of depression to Whitman, and recounted mental illness in his children and neighbors, as well, including the suicide of one of his sons. “I have always had a leaning towards suicide as a relief in case of great trouble,” he wrote in 1875; and elsewhere described his “discordant household” as a source of unhappiness. His reading of the Northern man’s works was a source simultaneously of intellectual engagement and emotional support.
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12019-07-11T16:28:05+00:00Joelle Thomas0feb3b2b7a8befeee2c7d2d710d303ed96772141Commentary: Essay and PodcastJoelle Thomas13Cohen 1plain1102021-01-15T17:36:15+00:00Joelle Thomas0feb3b2b7a8befeee2c7d2d710d303ed96772141
12021-02-16T20:07:58+00:00Joelle Thomas0feb3b2b7a8befeee2c7d2d710d303ed96772141IndexJoelle Thomas7Index of all pagesvisual_path2021-02-16T21:08:46+00:00Joelle Thomas0feb3b2b7a8befeee2c7d2d710d303ed96772141
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12019-07-12T12:17:33+00:00JNJ to WW 8 Feb 18751citationplain2019-07-12T12:17:33+00:00