Book contents
- Frontmatter
- 1 Introduction
- 2 “As If I Were With You”
- 3 Fratricide and Brotherly Love
- 4 Reading Whitman’s Postwar Poetry
- 5 Politics and Poetry
- 6 Some Remarks on the Poetics of “Participle-Loving Whitman”
- 7 “Being a Woman ... I Wish to Give My Own View”
- 8 Appearing in Print
- 9 “I Sing the Body Electric”
- 10 Walt Whitman
- 11 Borge's "Song of Myself"
- Suggestions for further reading
- Index
- Series List
7 - “Being a Woman ... I Wish to Give My Own View”
Some Nineteenth-Century Women's Responses to the I 860 Leaves of Grass
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 May 2006
- Frontmatter
- 1 Introduction
- 2 “As If I Were With You”
- 3 Fratricide and Brotherly Love
- 4 Reading Whitman’s Postwar Poetry
- 5 Politics and Poetry
- 6 Some Remarks on the Poetics of “Participle-Loving Whitman”
- 7 “Being a Woman ... I Wish to Give My Own View”
- 8 Appearing in Print
- 9 “I Sing the Body Electric”
- 10 Walt Whitman
- 11 Borge's "Song of Myself"
- Suggestions for further reading
- Index
- Series List
Summary
In Section 49 of “Song of Myself,” the Whitman persona marvels at a body that can know the acute sensory experience of giving birth, pain merging into the pleasure of expulsion, the ultimate orgasm, as the persona watches a childbirth. He lies next to the woman, close, in a way like present-day practice in which the male shares in the birthing experience as much as he can. The persona speaks:
I recline by the sills of the exquisite flexible doors, And mark the outlet, and mark the relief and escape.
To a reader familiar with Whitman's images and the valorization of the concepts that these images inscribe, the terms “doors,” “sills,” and “flexible” signal concepts and characteristics that coalesce into primary motifs in his work - the possibility of beginning anew and the strength gained through an inclusive or expansive point of view. Here, female genitalia image these concepts, the phrase “sills of the exquisite flexible doors” possessing an evocative power that critics have not usually associated with Whitman's images of female sexuality. The word “vulva,” if traced back far enough, has as one of its derivations “the leaf of a door” (the leaf-door, i.e., the flexibility of a folding door).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to Walt Whitman , pp. 110 - 134Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1995