Hidden LiteraciesMain MenuHidden Literacies - An IntroductionPhillis Wheatley, Amanuensisa letter from Susanna Wheatley, likely dictated to the famous poet she enslaved — with commentary by Katy L. ChilesWalt Whitman’s Baby Talka Confederate veteran writes fan mail in the voice of his infant son — with commentary by Matt Cohen‘Permit Us to Speak Plainly’the 1849 Munsee Petition to Zachary Taylor — with commentary by Andrew NewmanJuvenile Journalism and Genocidea manuscript magazine by three young boys — with commentary by Karen Sánchez-EpplerVisions, Versions, and DeedsCreek Sovereignty in Coosaponakeesa’s Memorials — with commentary by Caroline WiggintonAccounting for Mary Fowler Occoma household inventory of Mary Occom — with commentary by Kelly WisecupLetters and Charactersletter from Walter Duncan to Dollie Duncan from the Oklahoma State Penitentiary — with commentary by Ellen CushmanWriting the Prisoncongregate literacy in the New York penitentiary — with commentary by Jodi Schorb‘Outlandish Characters’a Kickapoo prayer stick — with commentary by Phillip RoundCesar Lyndon Was Herethe account book of an enslaved man in colonial Rhode Island — with commentary by Tara A. BynumBirch-Bark Publications of Simon PokaganMargaret NoodinHidden Literacies - The PodcastAll podcast episodesHidden Literacies - CreditsIndexIndex of all pages
1media/page1CrpAdj.jpgmedia/page1CrpAdj.jpg2019-03-12T11:19:52+00:00Walt Whitman’s Baby Talk30a Confederate veteran writes fan mail in the voice of his infant son — with commentary by Matt Cohenimage_header92022-08-09T14:36:56+00:00
"In the spring of 1875, the poet Walt Whitman, then living in Camden, New Jersey, received an unusual piece of fan mail from the South..." With wry understatement, so begins Matt Cohen's commentary on this artifact, bizarre even by the standards of Weird Americana. With a commitment to a close examination of the original, unregularized text, Cohen connects Johnson's engagement with Whitman's poetics of Democracy to the revanchist Southern nationalism that emerged after the Civil War, our contemporary wrestling with the problematics of commemoration, and his own experiences of the Tennessee River valley and Northern condescension to ideas of Southern literacy - Walt Whitman's Baby Talk.
Matt Cohen teaches English at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln and is a Faculty Fellow at the Center for Digital Research in the humanities there. He is the author or editor of five books, including Whitman’s Drift: Imagining Literary Distribution (University of Iowa Press, 2017). Cohen is also a contributing editor at the Walt Whitman Archive and co-editor, with Stephanie Browner and Kenneth M. Price, of the Charles Chesnutt Digital Archive.