Margaret Fuller: An American Romantic LifeOxford University Press, 1994-11-03 - 456 psl. With this first volume of a two-part biography of the Transcendentalist critic and feminist leader, Margaret Fuller, Capper has launched the premier modern biography of early America's best-known intellectual woman. Based on a thorough examination of all the firsthand sources, many of them never before used, this volume is filled with original portraits of Fuller's numerous friends and colleagues and the influential movements that enveloped them. Writing with a strong narrative sweep, Capper focuses on the central problem of Fuller's life--her identity as a female intellectual--and presents the first biography of Fuller to do full justice to its engrossing subject. This first volume chronicles Fuller's "private years": her gradual, tangled, but fascinating emergence out of the "private" life of family, study, Boston-Cambridge socializing, and anonymous magazine-writing, to the beginnings of her rebirth as antebellum America's female prophet-critic. Capper's biography is at once an evocative portrayal of an extraordinary woman and a comprehensive study of an avant-garde American intellectual type at the beginning of its first creation. |
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Rezultatai 1–5 iš 86
xi psl.
... seems to me to be dictated by her life itself. Fuller spent most of her waking hours reading, thinking, and writing. Without knowing what she believed, what she argued for, what she conceptualized, what she made into symbols, we cannot ...
... seems to me to be dictated by her life itself. Fuller spent most of her waking hours reading, thinking, and writing. Without knowing what she believed, what she argued for, what she conceptualized, what she made into symbols, we cannot ...
5 psl.
... seems incredible. Certainly it appeared so to Fuller, who in pamphlets and at meetings repeatedly protested his complete sympathy with the colonists' grievances, his scrupulous adherence to their various boycotts, his total rejection of ...
... seems incredible. Certainly it appeared so to Fuller, who in pamphlets and at meetings repeatedly protested his complete sympathy with the colonists' grievances, his scrupulous adherence to their various boycotts, his total rejection of ...
7 psl.
... seems to have most often rankled—in spite of their properly busy Bostonian literary and antiquarian interests (Henry lectured for the Lyceum circuit on Egyptian and Assyrian antiquities)—was their crassness. "He lived wholly in the ...
... seems to have most often rankled—in spite of their properly busy Bostonian literary and antiquarian interests (Henry lectured for the Lyceum circuit on Egyptian and Assyrian antiquities)—was their crassness. "He lived wholly in the ...
14 psl.
... feeling. His collegiate opinion (as he stated it to one friend) that such infatuations are "quite improper between men" he seems to have acted out with both men and women. Indeed, even when circumstances would seem to have 14 Margaret ...
... feeling. His collegiate opinion (as he stated it to one friend) that such infatuations are "quite improper between men" he seems to have acted out with both men and women. Indeed, even when circumstances would seem to have 14 Margaret ...
15 psl.
... seem to have required some expression of feelings, he preferred reticence, as in his rather frigid diary account of a ... seems to have strained relations for a while. After several clashes he wrote to his mother to complain of his ...
... seem to have required some expression of feelings, he preferred reticence, as in his rather frigid diary account of a ... seems to have strained relations for a while. After several clashes he wrote to his mother to complain of his ...
Turinys
3 | |
24 | |
3 Rustication | 57 |
4 Cambridge Renaissance | 84 |
5 A Tangled Pastoral | 121 |
6 Apprenticeship | 160 |
7 The Schoolmistress | 206 |
Illustrations | 208 |
8 Conversations | 252 |
9 The Transcendentalist | 307 |
Abbreviations | 351 |
Notes | 357 |
Index | 407 |
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Pagrindiniai terminai ir frazės
added Alcott American beautiful beginning Boston brother called Cambridge Caroline Channing character Clarke continued conversation course critical cultural early Emerson England expressed fact fall father feel female Finally friends Fuller George German girls give Groton hand Harvard heart Hedge Henry hope ibid idea intellectual interest James journal July later learned least less letter literary literature live look Margaret Margaret Fuller meeting mind Miss months mother nature never noted once perhaps political Providence quoted reason recent reported returned Romantic Sarah seems social society sometimes spirit studies suggested talk teaching thing thought told Transcendentalist Unitarian Ward week winter wish woman women write wrote York young
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75 psl. - MID pleasures and palaces though we may roam, Be it ever so humble, there's no place like home!
312 psl. - Hereby we know that we dwell in him, and he in us, because he hath given us of his Spirit.
358 psl. - Linda K. Kerber, Women of the Republic, Intellect and Ideology in Revolutionary America (Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina Press, 1980), pp.
183 psl. - The men thought she carried too many guns, and the women did not like one who despised them. I believe I fancied her too much interested in personal history ; and her talk was a comedy, in which dramatic justice was done to everybody's foibles. I remember that she made me laugh more than I liked...
126 psl. - I am enchanted while I read. He comprehends every feeling I have ever had so perfectly, expresses it so beautifully; but when I shut the book, it seems as if I had lost my personal identity; all my feelings linked with such an immense variety that belong to beings I had thought so different. What can I bring? There is no answer in my mind, except "It is so," or "It will be so," or "No doubt such and such feel so.
350 psl. - But in truth I have not much to say ; for since I have had leisure to look at myself, I find that, so far from being an original genius, I have not yet learned to think to any depth, and that the utmost I have done in life has been to form my character to a certain consistency, cultivate my tastes, and learn to tell the truth with a little better grace than I did at first.
48 psl. - I do not wish that instead of these masters I had read baby books, written down to children, and with such ignorant dulness that they blunt the senses and corrupt the tastes of the still plastic human being. But I do wish that I had read no books at all till later, that I had lived with toys, and played in the open air. Children should not cull the fruits of reflection and observation early, but expand in the sun, and let thoughts come to them. They should not through books antedate their actual...
281 psl. - I still possess, it was the carbuncle (emblematic gem) which cast light into many of the darkest caverns of human nature.— She loved me, too, though not so much, because her nature was "less high, less grave, less large, less deep...
252 psl. - He often lying broad awake, and yet Remaining from the body, and apart In intellect and power and will, hath heard Time flowing in the middle of the night, And all things creeping to a day of doom.