Introducing The Mickle Street Review, Second
Series
Geoffrey Sill
Not
many of us get a second chance at life. Thus it is
a particularly happy task for me to introduce the
second series of The Mickle Street Review,
a journal first published out of Walt Whitman's house
on Mickle Street in Camden, and now revived as a project
of the Walt Whitman Program in American Studies at
Rutgers University in Camden. To help the journal
find its new direction, I would like to review briefly
how The Mickle Street Review came to be and
what led to the end of its first run.
MSR
was the brainchild of the President of the Walt Whitman
Association in 1978, Frank McQuilkin. At the time,
Frank was a member of the English department at Rutgers-Camden,
a poet and literary entrepreneur. He ran the annual
"Walt Whitman Day" on campus and, as president
of the WWA, raised money and public consciousness
in support of Whitman's house on Mickle Street, which
at that time had fallen into disrepair. He persuaded
me to join the WWA board of directors and help him
start up a journal that would unite poets around the
country in an effort to save the house, which eventually
came to pass. Through an adroit use of the media,
Frank moved the State of New Jersey to renovate the
building next to the Whitman House, which now serves
the historic site as a visitor's center. In so doing,
he preserved not only the house, but also the "street-scape"
of which it is part. Hundreds of poets and readers
of Whitman from around the country wrote letters in
support of his campaign. So from the beginning, The
Mickle Street Review was part of a broad effort
to put poetry to work in the preservation of American,
and specifically Camden's, history and culture.
The
first issue was published in 1979 with the support
of Doris Kellogg Neale, who also donated a first edition
of the 1855 Leaves of Grass to the library
that the WWA had begun to collect. This issue featured
a transcript of a talk given by poet James Dickey
in Camden, in which he described his genesis as a
poet in 1942 while reading Whitman as he flew a target
plane for gunnery practice in the night sky over the
Atlantic, as well as testimonials by other poets of
their debts to Whitman. Over the next twelve years,
annual issues of MSR provided an outlet for
many poets who felt some link to Whitman, and increasingly
for essayists, critics, and reviewers of new books
about Whitman. The presence of David S. Reynolds on
the Rutgers-Camden faculty and the editorial board
of MSR for several years in the late 1980s added a
scholarly dimension to both "Walt Whitman Day"
and the journal, with the result that Camden's Whitman
conferences began to receive scores of registrants
and the journal to be deluged with hundreds of submissions.
What had begun as a small sideline had become, by
1991, a mammoth responsibility for the sole remaining
editor, who decided to end the run with Issue #12,
"Walt Whitman and the Visual Arts," which
was co-edited with art historian Roberta K. Tarbell
and republished in 1992 by Rutgers University Press.
In 1994, the best essays from the first eleven issues
of MSR were republished by the University
of Tennessee Press as Walt Whitman of Mickle Street.
Meanwhile, the Walt Whitman Association library, augmented
by the large collection of first editions of Leaves
of Grass donated by Col. Richard Gimbel, was
catalogued in a special issue of MSR (# 9
Part One, 1987), and included in the Rutgers
University Library on-line catalogue.
The
addition of Americanists Carol J. Singley and Tyler
B. Hoffman to the Rutgers-Camden English department
in the 1990s and the hiring of poet-scholar J. T.
Barbarese in 1998, whose poem "Through the Windows
at Walt's" was featured in an early issue of
MSR, have now made it possible to re-invent
The Mickle Street Review along new lines.
MSR was never meant to be the scholarly journal
of record for Whitman, a position that was always
(and continues to be) held by the Walt
Whitman Quarterly Review, edited by Ed Folsom.
From the start, the mission of MSR was to
provide common ground for poets, writers, teachers,
students, and readers with an interest in Walt Whitman
or the subjects that he wrote about. The second series
of MSR, edited by Ty Hoffman, will be even
broader in scope, seeking to initiate a dialogue among
diverse speakers and audiences who might otherwise
not come into contact with each other. Spinning out
filaments of its own, this time through a web much
wider than that available to Whitman, The Mickle
Street Review will connect people who may have
nothing in common except to have been, at some point,
lifted out of themselves by Whitman's overwhelming
power. To have read Whitman, even once, is to join
a vast network whose members, from the least to the
most famous, have much to say to each other. The mission
of The Mickle Street Review is to be the
medium through which that dialogue happens
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