Emerson, Romanticism, and Intuitive Reason: The Transatlantic "light of All Our Day"University of Missouri Press, 2005 - 555 páginas "Comparative study in transatlantic Romanticism that traces the links between German idealism, British Romanticism (Wordsworth, Coleridge, Carlyle), and American Transcendentalism. Focuses on Emerson's development and use of the concept of intuitive Reason, which became the intellectual and emotional foundation of American Transcendentalism"--Provided by publisher. |
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Página 4
... described — reflecting that legendary Emerson- ian “ optimism ” impervious to evidence of evil — as a refusal or inability to mourn actually takes the form , under the auspices of the inward or higher “ light , ” of a reconciliation of ...
... described — reflecting that legendary Emerson- ian “ optimism ” impervious to evidence of evil — as a refusal or inability to mourn actually takes the form , under the auspices of the inward or higher “ light , ” of a reconciliation of ...
Página 7
... described Emerson as “ the friend and aider of those who would live in the spirit , ” he was quietly but aptly reminding us of Coleridge and of the specific works of that Inquiring Spirit — The Friend and Aids to Reflection — that had ...
... described Emerson as “ the friend and aider of those who would live in the spirit , ” he was quietly but aptly reminding us of Coleridge and of the specific works of that Inquiring Spirit — The Friend and Aids to Reflection — that had ...
Página 14
... described by three key participants in the movement : Hedge ; Theodore Parker , the Transcendentalist pastor and abolitionist who first took fire from Emerson's Divinity School Address ; and Emerson himself , who , in a late lecture ...
... described by three key participants in the movement : Hedge ; Theodore Parker , the Transcendentalist pastor and abolitionist who first took fire from Emerson's Divinity School Address ; and Emerson himself , who , in a late lecture ...
Página 61
... described in book 1 of The Prelude , with its joint ministry of beauty and of fear — names that sublime pair the “ first- born ... twin birth ” of “ Reason . ” As “ twin ” suggests , Coleridge is again recalling Milton : the passage in ...
... described in book 1 of The Prelude , with its joint ministry of beauty and of fear — names that sublime pair the “ first- born ... twin birth ” of “ Reason . ” As “ twin ” suggests , Coleridge is again recalling Milton : the passage in ...
Página 64
... described , in a Coleridgean organic metaphor , as “ the enflowered and perfect statements of truths which had been struggling for expression in his own mind . ” 17 But there were , in 1829 , other receptive minds on the horizon , with ...
... described , in a Coleridgean organic metaphor , as “ the enflowered and perfect statements of truths which had been struggling for expression in his own mind . ” 17 But there were , in 1829 , other receptive minds on the horizon , with ...
Conteúdo
1 | |
23 | |
46 | |
80 | |
Chapter 4 Emersons Discipleship | 118 |
Chapter 5 Powers and Pulsations | 153 |
Chapter 6 Intuition and Tuition | 184 |
Chapter 7 Passivity and Activity | 223 |
Chapter 10 Emerson among the Orphic Poets | 355 |
Chapter 11 Emersonian Optimism and The Stream of Tendency | 397 |
Chapter 12 Wordsworthian Hope | 425 |
Chapter 13 Mourning Becomes Morning | 447 |
Chapter 14 Wordsworths OdeWaldo and Threnody | 472 |
Appendix LAODAMIA AND DION | 512 |
Bibliography | 521 |
Index | 543 |
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Termos e frases comuns
Aids to Reflection American Scholar assertion beauty Biographia Biographia Literaria Blake Bloom called Carlyle chapter cited Cole Coleridge and Wordsworth Coleridge's creative criticism crucial death distinction Divinity School Address earth echoing edition elegy Emer Emersonian essay eternal Excursion feel final genius Goethe Harold Bloom heart heaven hope human imagination immortality individual influence insists intellectual Intimations Ode intuitive Reason italics added journal entry Kant Keats Laodamia later lecture letter light lines literary live M. H. Abrams Milton mind moral nature never Nietzsche Nietzsche's original pantheism Paradise passage passive philosophy Plotinus poem poet poetic poetry polarity praise Prelude prose Prospectus quoted Ralph Waldo Emerson readers Romantic Romanticism seems Self-Reliance sense soul spirit stanza sublime things thought Threnody Tintern Abbey tion Transcendentalism Transcendentalists truth understanding universe vision W. B. Yeats Wanderer William William Wordsworth Words Wordsworthian writing Yeats Yeats's