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Dieter
Schulz
Emerson
and Thoreau or Steps Beyond Ourselves Studies
in Transcendentalism
2012,
kt., VIII+307 S., 30,00 € / 35,00 $, ISBN 978-3-86809-057-4 (VISA
/ MasterCard accepted)
The
essays collected in this volume circle around the notion
and the imagery of transcendence, a concept crucial
not only to the Transcendentalist movement proper
with Emerson and Thoreau as its key figures, but
also to their antecedents in New England Puritanism
(here represented by RogerWilliams and John Cotton),
to their followers in twentieth-century Modernism
(notably William Carlos Williams), and to our own
time. Highly critical of contemporary politics,
society, and culture, the Transcendentalists also challenged
the objectivist claims of the “methods” or “ways”
advocated by the sciences. The metaphysics of the
Emersonian scholar as well as the Thoreauvian saunterer
revitalize the imagery of the way in an attempt to
engage the world in a hermeneutical dialogue – a project
that is timelier than ever in order to overcome
the crippling consequences of the “two-cultures”
split.
PDF Contents
PDF Preface
PDF Introduction
PDF Rezension
in Nineteenth-Century Prose, Vol. 42, No. 1 (2015) [Auszug]
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