Allen Ginsberg

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    Page 11 of 25 - About 245 Essays
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    Walt Whitman& Emily Dickinson Points of View Walt Whitman and Emily Dickinson are one of the most famous poets in the American literature. Walt Whitman in his poem shows that he does not have any religion to follow, he creates his own one, and in some point it shows that he believes in God, but he does not follow the religion. Another point is that in “Song of Myself” he is celebrating himself and the doctor’s opinions are the spiritual relationship. Additionally, he describes his and the…

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    Ginsberg's Episodes

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    My Life as I See It, Blaze Ginsberg seeks to help his audience, ranging from strangers to family members, understand who he is. The author relays his life as if it were to become a television series, complete with music soundtrack and episode trivia. Through his work’s unique structure, Ginsberg is able to translate the way his autistic self sees the world, while also reminding the reader that each individual will look upon this same world in their own way too. Ginsberg suggests that his life…

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    Sandburg And Whitman

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    Two poets describe the American plight and experience of the 19th and early 20th century in more detail and emotion than any other poets – Walt Whitman and Carl Sandburg. From two different generations, the younger writer’s content and style is very much an extension of his elder, Whitman. Both write, in a very casual style, about the suffering of the common man that they saw firsthand; Whitman’s “I Sit and Look Out” and Sandburg’s “Chicago” provide great examples of their observations of the…

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    The Beat Generation was heavily influenced by the events of World War II. Jack Kerouac was the original beatnik, with William S. Burroughs, and Charles Bukowski following him. Although other authors built upon Kerouac's work they highly differ in their styles. Beatnik literature reflects the rebellious inner self from the view of post World War II teenagers. The beats also tend to be very experimental with their lives and writing styles. Many believe that "the master narratives strangely seem…

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    How does one interpret unity in America, after all we live in the United States? In the poems, “I Hear America Singing” by Walt Whitman and “I, Too” by Langston Hughes, both authors express what it means for them to live in America. Hughes writes from an African American perspective living in the 1930s, while Walt Whitman writes from a Caucasian perspective living in the mid 1800s. These facts play an important role in interpreting these poems. “I Hear America Singing” and “I, Too” share a…

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    Noiseless Patient Spider

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    Thesis: Whitman’s use of visual imagery, anaphora, and personification depicts his overarching message of isolation through the use of the spider and the soul as metaphors in his poem, “A Noiseless Patient Spider.” Topic Sentence: Whitman’s use of visual imagery throughout his poem demonstrates the metaphor of a spider and the soul representing isolation similar to the human race. In the first line of the poem, Whitman establishes an image of a hardworking and quiet spider, which outlays the big…

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    Through the extensive storytelling form embedded in Song of Myself by Walt Whitman and How it feels to be colored me by Zora Neale Hurston, the common both works encompass a stylistic writing that draws imagery to circumstance. With comparable insight from a host of scholars, both of these short stories reveal a theme that examines the essence of human circumstance vs. the realities of Nature. While Walt Whitman directly exhibits the theme of man vs. nature through the story. He explicates…

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    At the beginning of "Howl", Ginsberg emphasizes his work as protest poetry when he writes, "I saw the best minds of my generation destroyed by madness, starving hysterical naked / …who poverty and tatters and hollowed-eyed and high sat up smoking in the supernatural darkness […] across the tops of cities" (1-4). In these lines of poetry, Ginsberg identifies how the free-spirited artists, eccentric musicians, and political dissidents of…

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    Art and emotion, often times, go hand-in-hand with one another due to the generalistic idea that emotions are what fuels the artist drive to produce such wondrous masterpieces. Poetry, is one such art that allows its creator to call upon a variety of emotions. Whether those emotions are a sense of delight, anger, contempt, sorrow, etc, all are forms of emotion and are easily seen throughout the many poems written by Emily Dickinson, Walt Whitman, and Paul Lurance Dunbar. When these poets fuse…

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    In 1831, at the age of twelve, Walt Whitman began working for his local newspaper. He soon fell in love with the written word and started writing his own poetry (“Poet Walt Whitman”). Fast forward to the turn of the 20th century, and Whitman has already made a name for himself as one of America’s most influential poets. Two of Whitman’s most esteemed works are “O Captain! My Captain!”, written in 1865 to reflect on Abraham Lincoln's death, and “O Me! O Life!”, written in 1891 to contemplate…

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