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Full Description
The time has come to take another look at Longfellow, America's most popular poet. Christoph Irmscher overturns the modern prejudice against Longfellow as the mere purveyor of literary comfort food. Examining his unpublished papers alongside letters written by his fans at home and abroad, Irmscher offers a fresh view of the poet's connection with his audience. Reviewing Longfellow's idea of authorship, his travels, and his translations, Irmscher demonstrates that Longfellow saw literature as a transnational conversation breaking down social and linguistic barriers. For Longfellow, the poet was less Emerson's "liberating god" than a distributor of cultural goods democratically shared by authors and readers alike. Longfellow Redux is the first book-length study of Longfellow's poetry since 1966 and contains numerous illustrations, including previously unpublished pencil sketches by Longfellow himself.
Contents
List of Illustrations xi
Acknowledgments xiii
A Note on Quotations xvii
Introduction 1
1. Strangers as Friends: Longfellow and His Readers 7
2. How Marbles Are Made: Fatherhood and Authorship 72
3. Mad for Travel: Enrico Abroad 145
4. "It Whirls Me Away": Longfellow and Translation 218
Epilogue 275
Notes 279
Bibliography 317
Index 333