EmersonHarvard University Press, 2004-09-30 - 416 psl. "An institution is the lengthened shadow of one man," Ralph Waldo Emerson once wrote--and in this book, the leading scholar of New England literary culture looks at the long shadow Emerson himself has cast, and at his role and significance as a truly American institution. On the occasion of Emerson's 200th birthday, Lawrence Buell revisits the life of the nation's first public intellectual and discovers how he became a "representative man." |
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... especially west of the Alleghenies, lyceums were especially the work of the New England diaspora. But to a comparatively sheltered, well-bred Bostonian like Emerson, never but once before the age of thirty known to have been thrust into ...
... especially for The Lost Arts, a speech he is said to have given more than a thousand times, just as eminent African American abolitionist Frederick Douglass's mainstay was Self-Made Men. These constraints did not bother Emerson ...
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Turinys
7 | |
2 Emersonian SelfReliance in Theory and Practice | 59 |
3 Emersonian Poetics | 107 |
4 Religious Radicalisms | 158 |
5 Emerson as a Philosopher? | 199 |
Emerson and Abolition | 242 |
7 Emerson as AntiMentor | 288 |
Notes | 337 |
Acknowledgments | 383 |
Index | 385 |