Synopses & Reviews
Not many people know that Walt Whitmanandmdash;arguably the preeminent American poet of the nineteenth centuryandmdash;began his literary career as a novelist.
Franklin Evans, or The Inebriate: A Tale of the Times was his first and only novel. Published in 1842, during a period of widespread temperance activity, it became Whitmanandrsquo;s most popular work during his lifetime, selling some twenty thousand copies.
The novel tells the rags-to-riches story of Franklin Evans, an innocent young man from the Long Island countryside who seeks his fortune in New York City. Corrupted by music halls, theaters, and above all taverns, he gradually becomes a drunkard. Until the very end of the tale, Evansandrsquo;s efforts to abstain fail, and each time he resumes drinking, another series of misadventures ensues. Along the way, Evans encounters a world of mores and conventions rapidly changing in response to the vicissitudes of slavery, investment capital, urban mass culture, and fervent reform. Although Evans finally signs a temperance pledge, his sobriety remains haunted by the often contradictory and unsettling changes in antebellum American culture.
The editorsandrsquo; substantial introduction situates Franklin Evans in relation to Whitmanandrsquo;s life and career, mid-nineteenth-century American print culture, and many of the developments and institutions the novel depicts, including urbanization, immigration, slavery, the temperance movement, and new understandings of class, race, gender, and sexuality. This edition includes a short temperance story Whitman published at about the same time as he did Franklin Evans, the surviving fragment of what appears to be another unfinished temperance novel by Whitman, and a temperance speech Abraham Lincoln gave the same year that Franklin Evans was published.
Review
andldquo;Christopher Castiglia and Glenn Hendler provide a truly state-of-the-art introduction to Walt Whitmanandrsquo;s only novel, a lively and thorough account of the varied contexts that best illuminate the significance of Whitmanandrsquo;s rough and rowdy tale.andrdquo;andmdash;Michael Moon, author of Disseminating Whitman: Revision and Corporeality in Leaves of Grass
Review
andldquo;Readers interested primarily in the social history of the country will find much here that is compelling. The temperance movement was the first wide-spread social reform movement in the United States, and the novelandrsquo;s greatest claim to interest from a wider readership comes from what it reveals about that movement. . . . [T]here are also glimpses of the young poetandrsquo;s developing voice. The novel reveals a belief in the power of words to change the lives and influence the actions of individual readers, most of whom would have come from the working class. Joined with more original language, this conviction would give Leaves of Grass, written a decade later, its passion and force.andrdquo;
Synopsis
A reprint of a novel and other temperance writings by Walt Whitman, with an introduction and explanatory notes by the editors.
About the Author
Walt Whitman (1819andndash;1892) was a poet, journalist, and essayist. His enormously influential poetry includes the collection Leaves of Grass, first published in 1855.
Christopher Castiglia is Professor of English at Pennsylvania State University. He is the author of Bound and Determined: Captivity, Culture-Crossing, and White Womanhood from Mary Rowlandson to Patty Hearst.
Glenn Hendler is Associate Professor of English at the University of Notre Dame and Visiting Associate Professor of English at Fordham University (2006andndash;07). He is the author of Public Sentiments: Structures of Feeling in Nineteenth-Century American Literature and a coeditor of Sentimental Men: Masculinity and the Politics of Affect in American Culture.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments vii
Introduction ix
I. Franklin Evans, or the Inebriate
A Tale of the Times 1
II. Supplementary Texts
The Madman 117
The Child and the Profligate 123
An Address Delivered by Abraham Lincoln Before the Springfield Washingtonian Temperance Society, at the Second Presbyterian Church, Springfield, Illinois, On the 22nd Day of February, 1842 135
Bibliography 145