id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_pf4obyokz5eyrehi3hzrwfkwze ZĂ©lia Rafael "What Thoughts I Have of You Tonight, Walt Whitman" Continuity and Innovation in Allen Ginsberg's "Howl" 2020.0 20 .pdf application/pdf 5777 348 63 Emerson for the advent of a poet who would sing America and its peoples kept resonating far response began with Walt Whitman, and continued across time and space, resounding from Poetry for the Modern Man: From Whitman to Ginsberg new revolution in poetry, Whitman referred to the rising of a new race of poets, stating that In this sense, Ginsberg also incarnates the stream of poets called for by Emerson, Another important factor which influenced the poetry of both Whitman and Ginsberg is what occurred in Whitman's time, music and other forms of art influence and re-create each "Howl": Where Ginsberg and Whitman Intersect Allen Ginsberg's "Howl" appears the anthem of a new America, in a time characterized by a as Walt Whitman and Allen Ginsberg, whose poetic work both reflected and acted upon their In that sense, Whitman's and Ginsberg's words, composed in time and ./cache/work_pf4obyokz5eyrehi3hzrwfkwze.pdf ./txt/work_pf4obyokz5eyrehi3hzrwfkwze.txt