Author Archive | Dan Colella

Final Project Presentation: Photo Essay

“No man has been photographed more than I have” (Walt Whitman). According to Ed Folsom in his article, Photographs and Photographers, Walt Whitman was “the most photographed writer of the nineteenth century,” with over 130 portraits taken during his lifetime. Photography, then, was a crucial and integral piece of Whitman’s life, capturing his journey from […]

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The Decay of Walt Whitman’s World: A Photo Essay

“Those who contemplate the beauty of the earth find reserves of strength that will endure as long as life lasts” (Rachel Carson). Born in 1819 and dying in 1892, Walt Whitman’s life spanned much of the ever-changing socio-cultural climate of the 19th century. Witnessing the soar of Industrialism in America and, perhaps more impactful, the […]

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Final Project Proposal: Photo Essay

“No man has been photographed more than I have” (Walt Whitman). According to Ed Folsom in his article, Photographs and Photographers, Walt Whitman was “the most photographed writer of the nineteenth century,” with over 130 portraits taken during his lifetime. Photography, then, was a crucial and integral piece of Whitman’s life, capturing his journey from […]

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Reflections on the Making of Modern Manhatta

During the summer of 2019 I completed a short film for the final project in my Sight and Sound Filmmaking course at NYU. The projects needed to be in black and white, but could incorporate sound if we wanted. Inspired by the magnificence of the city of Manhattan, much like Walt Whitman was, I thought […]

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How Gay Was Walt Whitman?

In his essay, “How Gay Was Walt Whitman?,” Arnie Kantrowitz analyzes the multitude of evidence brought forth in both Whitman’s writing and that of gay critics to determine if the grey poet was a homosexual. Kantrowitz writes how “it is difficult for modem gay readers to imagine Whitman as anything other than one of us […]

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Looking for John Wayne

Looking for John Wayne, I knew he wasn’t anywhere nearby. He left some time ago, into the sunset for good. He was gone, he could be anywhere. The west was lost, and so was he. Locomotives came from the east. They came from everywhere, but here. Displacing lives, burning homes, For what? The east is […]

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Muddied Mannahatta: The Post-Whitman World in the Poetry of Garcia Lorca and Calvin Hernton

  Whitman’s poetry spans generations and has touched the minds of readers, future authors and poets. During Whitman’s life, he perceived the world, primarily his home of New York, with great admiration. From poems like “Mannahatta” to “Crossing Brooklyn Ferry” and so many others, Whitman was enthralled by not only the beauty of his home, […]

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