We Stand before the Secret of the World: Traces along the Pathway of American RomanticismUniversitat de València, 2011-11-28 - 156 psl. Deu assajos publicats amb anterioritat que, en conjunt, tenen la finalitat de proporcionar un debat coherent de la filosofia antisistemàtica del trascendentalisme americà i la forma que es reflecteix en diversos escriptors i pintors dels segles XIX i XX als Estats Units. Reflexiona sobre les implicacions de la revolució romàntica en el pensament occidental i demostrar la importància del romanticisme per al desenvolupament de la cultura americana. |
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Rezultatai 1–5 iš 55
7 psl.
... Emerson 2. Emerson's Nature: The Romantic Case against Science.............................................27 3. The Romantic Science of “The American Scholar”................................
... Emerson 2. Emerson's Nature: The Romantic Case against Science.............................................27 3. The Romantic Science of “The American Scholar”................................
9 psl.
... Emerson and the Romantic mentality. This book reflects my patient attempt to find a viable pathway for myself through American Transcendentalism and a few of its combinations and permutations in the artistic expression of the United ...
... Emerson and the Romantic mentality. This book reflects my patient attempt to find a viable pathway for myself through American Transcendentalism and a few of its combinations and permutations in the artistic expression of the United ...
13 psl.
... Emerson's organs was highly developed , it was the eye . Vision , he informs us on more than one occasion , was his most beloved sense . But then , he lived at a time when scientists , philosophers and poets were paying a tremendous ...
... Emerson's organs was highly developed , it was the eye . Vision , he informs us on more than one occasion , was his most beloved sense . But then , he lived at a time when scientists , philosophers and poets were paying a tremendous ...
15 psl.
... Emerson, who had already expressed the same ideas with a somewhat more plodding elegance. For example, in Chapter IV of Nature, the chapter on language, Emerson says that [...] man is an analogist, and studies relations in all objects ...
... Emerson, who had already expressed the same ideas with a somewhat more plodding elegance. For example, in Chapter IV of Nature, the chapter on language, Emerson says that [...] man is an analogist, and studies relations in all objects ...
17 psl.
... Emerson really had to do was to jettison the dualistic model that encourages us to believe that the divine is somehow separated and distinct from the physical. At this point, we can begin to appreciate how similar Edwards and Emerson ...
... Emerson really had to do was to jettison the dualistic model that encourages us to believe that the divine is somehow separated and distinct from the physical. At this point, we can begin to appreciate how similar Edwards and Emerson ...
Turinys
9 | |
27 | |
35 | |
Variations on a Theme Some Notes on the Emersonian | 47 |
The Piercing Virtue of Pain | 61 |
Emily Dickinson | 71 |
The Undiscovered Country from Whose Bourn Some Travelers | 83 |
An Essay in Extended | 99 |
The Romantic Dimension of Isaac McCaslins Freedom | 117 |
Further Shades of Meaning | 135 |
Selected | 151 |
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20th century already ambiguity American Scholar Beauchamp becomes beginning blood Cass completely concept consciousness context course critics culture death Delta Autumn destruction divine earth Edmonds Emerson Emily Dickinson emotional essay experience express fact fascicles Fathers Faulkner feelings finally Heidegger Higginson human hunt ideas Ike's imagination Isaac McCaslin kind knowledge language living logic look Lucas Lucas Beauchamp M. H. Abrams Martin Heidegger McCaslin mind Molly Moses mystery mystical natural world never novel ourselves Pantaloon in Black perceive perception physical Poe’s poem poet poetry Porte Puritans race Ralph Waldo Emerson rational relationship renunciation revelation Rider Romantic Romanticism Roth says seems sense silence soul spiritual dimension stanza story suggest things thinking Thomas Pynchon Thomas Wentworth Higginson thought Tomey's Turl Transcendentalism truth ultimate Uncle Buck unconscious mind understand Universitat de València vision Wasichus Whitman William Faulkner words Zack