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A Psychological and Philosophical Reading of Human Discourse in Walt Whitman's "Song of Myself"
Author(s) -
Baker Bani Khair,
Abdullah F. Al Badarneh,
Abdullah K. Shehabat,
Abdelhameed Abu Seeni,
Suleman Salem Al Ferain
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
world journal of english language
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1925-0711
pISSN - 1925-0703
DOI - 10.5430/wjel.v12n1p294
Subject(s) - individualism , existentialism , reflexive pronoun , poetry , consciousness , reading (process) , philosophy , transpersonal , literature , aesthetics , psychology , epistemology , linguistics , art , law , political science
Walt Whitman’s Song of Myself can be looked at as a psychological and ontological personal experience for the poet. In fact, having thoughtfully read and critically analysed the poem and with much attention to the philosophical and psychological implications which prevail throughout the song, we see that the poem is teemed with condense thematic observations about the existential self and the individualistic sense embedded through a universal and unified human discourse beginning from the micro-self and ending with a macro and collective sense, referred to as “transpersonal”. We argue that “Song of Myself” can be viewed in light of its psychological and/or individualistic experience, especially from the side of the poet. We further assume that the title of the poem has both the reader and the poet’s perspectives, thus contributing to more indulging in a personal and psychological state of mind and individualistic journey. While the poem demonstrates a self-revealing image about the internal structure of content as it significantly reminds the reader of himself/herself, it is found that such a psychological and cognitive reminder adds a special kind of framework that brings its borders so close to the readers' cognitive and existential consciousness which asserts a universal human discourse.

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