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Thoreau's Wild Rhetoric
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 263

Thoreau's Wild Rhetoric

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1990
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  • Publisher: Unknown

In Thoreau's Wild Rhetoric, Golemba examines how Thoreau took great interest in a linguistic agony that he found to be specific to American Romantics. These writers sought to be willed (clear, didactic, and inspirational) yet also desired to stress a wild rhetoric, one that used contradiction, paradox, and textual gaps. famous works like Walden as well as neglected pieces like The Landlord. In concerntrating on linguistic schisms, this book clarifies the significant communicative problems which faced Romantic artists, and were also crucial to extra-literary discourses of religion, law, and the popular culture of his era.

George Ripley
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 184

George Ripley

None

The Spiritual Journal of Henry David Thoreau
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 298

The Spiritual Journal of Henry David Thoreau

Most people who care about nature cannot help but use religious language to describe their experience. We can trace many of these conceptions of nature and holiness directly to influential nineteenth-century writers, especially Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862). In Walden, he writes that "God himself culminates in the present moment," and that in nature we encounter, "the workman whose work we are." But what were the sources of his religious convictions about the meaning of nature in human life?

Frank R. Stockton
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 192

Frank R. Stockton

None

Ruthless Democracy
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 235

Ruthless Democracy

In Ruthless Democracy, Timothy Powell reimagines the canonical origins of "American" identity by juxtaposing authors such as Hawthorne, Melville, and Thoreau with Native American, African American, and women authors. Taking his title from Melville, Powell identifies an unresolvable conflict between America's multicultural history and its violent will to monoculturalism. Powell challenges existing perceptions of the American Renaissance--the period at the heart of the American canon and its evolutions--by expanding the parameters of American identity. Drawing on the critical traditions of cultural studies and new historicism, Powell invents a new critical paradigm called "historical multicult...

Margaret Fuller's New York Journalism
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 246

Margaret Fuller's New York Journalism

In this book, Catherine C. Mitchell combines a substantial biographical essay with a generous selection of Fuller's columns on topics such as prison and asylum reform, abolitionism, and woman's rights. Mitchell's essay puts special emphasis on the Tribune of the 1840s - its staff, its readership, the nature and impact of its news coverage and editorial viewpoint, its place in the competitive world of New York journalism - and so provides an invaluable context for understanding Fuller's duties at the newspaper. The selections from Fuller's Tribune writings include much material that has not been previously reprinted or that has not appeared in other twentieth-century collections of Fuller's work.

The Utopian Alternative
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 544

The Utopian Alternative

The utopian socialism of Charles Fourier spread throughout Europe in the mid-nineteenth century, but it was in the United States that it generated the most intense excitement. In this rich and engaging narrative, Carl J. Guarneri traces the American Fourierist movement from its roots in the religious, social, and economic upheavals of the 1830s, through its bold communal experiments of the 1840s, to its lingering twilight after the Civil War.

The Simple Life
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 354

The Simple Life

Looking across three centuries of want and prosperity, war and peace, this work introduces a cast of practitioners and proponents of the simple life, among them Thomas Jefferson, Scott and Helen Nearing, Jimmy Carter and Jane Addams. It finds that nothing is simple about our mercurial devotion to the ideal of plain living and high thinking. Though we may hedge a bit in practice and are now and then driven by motives no deeper than nostalgia, this work stresses that the diverse efforts to avoid anxious social striving and compulsive materialism have been essential to the nation's spiritual health.

The Transformation of Theology, 1830-1890
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 502

The Transformation of Theology, 1830-1890

Charles Cashdollar reinterprets nineteenth-century British and American Protestant thought by identifying positivism as the central intellectual issue of the era. Positivism meant, at first, the ideas of the French thinker Auguste Comte; later in the century, the term indicated a more general opposition to supernatural religion. Cashdollar shows that contemporary thinkers recognized positivism, at each of these stages, as the most fundamental of the proliferating challenges to religious belief. He further reveals how the encounter with positivism altered Protestant orthodoxy--in both subtle and radical ways. Positivists denied that humans could know anything other than physical phenomena. De...

Research Guide to American Literature
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 247

Research Guide to American Literature

Presents American literature from the beginnings to the Revolutionary War, including essays, narratives and more.