MARC 主機 00000cam a22003854a 4500
001 MUSE104994
003 BmJHUP
005 20130419142337.0
006 m f d u
007 cr un uuauu
008 120816s2012 mau sb 001 0 eng d
010 |z2012030820
020 9781613762141 (electronic bk.)
020 1613762143 (electronic bk.)
020 9781558499638 (pbk.)
020 9781558499621 (hbk.)
020 1558499628 (hbk.)
040 MdBmJHUP|cMdBmJHUP
041 0 eng
043 n-us---
050 00 PS310.C585|bB37 2012
082 00 811/.409358737|223
100 1 Barrett, Faith,|d1965-
245 10 To fight aloud is very brave|h[electronic resource] :
|bAmerican poetry and the Civil War /|cFaith Barrett
260 Amherst :|bUniversity of Massachusetts Press,|c2012.
|e(Baltimore, Md. :|fProject MUSE,|g2013)
300 1 online resource (328 p.)
504 Includes bibliographical references and index
505 0 Introduction: the rhetoric of voice in Civil War poetry --
Shaping communities through popular song -- "We are here
at our country's call":nationalist commitments and
personal stances in Union and Confederate soldiers' poems
-- The lyric I and the poetics of protest: Julia Ward Howe
and Frances Harper -- Addresses to a divided nation: Emily
Dickinson, Walt Whitman, and the place of the lyric I --
Romantic visions and Southern stances: Henry Timrod, Sarah
Piatt, and George Moses Horton --"They answered him aloud"
: popular voice and nationalist allegiances in Herman
Melville's battle-pieces -- Epilogue: Civil War poetry in
the twentieth and twenty-first centuries
588 Description based on print version record
650 0 Patriotic poetry, American|xHistory and criticism
650 0 War poetry, American|xHistory and criticism
650 0 American poetry|y19th century|xHistory and criticism
651 0 United States|xHistory|yCivil War, 1861-1985|xLiterature
and the war
710 2 Project Muse
856 40 |zFull text available: |uhttp://muse.jhu.edu/books/
9781613762141/