Transcendentalism “Truth is Beyond”
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Transcript of Transcendentalism “Truth is Beyond”
Transcendentalism“Truth is Beyond”
Transcendentalism Unitarian ministers realized that society and
government controlled what people did and that the individual person as God’s perfect creation, were capable of doing what is right through their souls and intuition.
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TranscendentalismMovement called for new ideas in culture, religion,
philosophy, and especially literature
Also known as “American Transcendentalism” that emerged in New England in middle 19th century
Movement began as an informal Boston discussion club, but its influence gradually rippled outward to affect the values and beliefs of Americans and US writers
Began as a protest against the general established state of culture and society, in particular the state of intellectualism
Transcendentalism Core BeliefsAn ideal spiritual state that 'transcends' the
physical and empirical, and is only realized through the individual's intuition, rather than through the doctrine’s of established religions
Rooted in the transcendental philosophy of Immanuel Kant
PrinciplesIdealism through the fundamental belief in a
higher reality of ideas in a metaphysical realm of spirit, that is screened and symbolically revealed by the material world
Pantheism in that there was no direct supernatural worship, but admiration and revery, via the natural world and its visible images, and focused on an ultimate “oneness” in which every individual thing forms part of an intricate and larger harmony
Optimism through followers who were convinced of the essential goodness and purposefulness of life
InfluencesKantian metaphysicsRomanticismPuritanismPlatonism and neo-platonismMysticism
Popular Transcendentalists
Henry David ThoreauRalph Waldo EmersonWalt Whitman
Modern Transcendentalists Martin Luther King Jr. Mahatma Gandhi Mother Theresa
Ralph Waldo Emerson• Born in Boston, MA.• Raised by his mother and his
aunt, both practicing intellectuals.
• He attended Harvard College where he worked multiple jobs to support himself.
• He then was ordained a junior pastor at Boston’s Second Church.
• Began the Transcendental Club, where they published a journal called, The Dial.
• During this time, Ralph published his most famous work, Self-Reliance in 1842.
Writing StyleOptimistic view of human spiritNatural world held spiritual truthsHighly charged (strong language) “electric”Themes of self improvement, power, fate,
history, and Christianity
The Conduct of Life (1860)Essay broken down into sections revealing a
sense of human togetherness and an awareness of man’s limitationsFatePowerWealthBehaviorWorshipBeauty
Henry David Thoreau• Born in Concord, MA.• Taught School at Concord
Academy in Canton, MA. But dismissed soon after.
• Went back to Harvard and graduated.
• Moved back to Concord where he met Ralph Waldo Emerson who became a type of mentor.
• Emerson’s works inspired Thoreau to spend two years living “simply” in the wilderness.
• Through his two years, he wrote Civil Disobedience.
Writing StylesWrote about nature, history, philosophyLiterary style interweaves close natural
observation, personal experience, pointed rhetoric, symbolic meanings, and historical lore
Poetic sensibility, philosophical austerity, and “Yankee” love of practical detail
Idea of survival in the face of hostile elements, historical change, and natural decay
Waldendeclaration of independence, social
experiment, voyage of spiritual discovery, and manual for self reliance
Based on a cabin in Walden woods owned by his friend Ralph Waldo Emerson. Emphasizes the importance of being close to nature. Materialists attitudes. Attempt to engage creativity with the better aspects of contemporary culture.
Civil Disobediencepeople should not permit government to
overrule their consciencesMotivated by his disgust for slavery.
Government is more harmful than helpful and therefore cannot be justified.
Margaret Fuller• Born in Cambridge, MA.• Her father taught her thoroughly,
learning to read by the age of 3½ .
• By the age of 30, Fuller gained the reputation as being the most well-read person in New England.
• However, her father died in 1835, leaving the family dependent upon her, causing fuller to get a job as a teacher at Alcott’s Temple School in Boston.
• In 1839, Fuller gained a position at Emerson’s Journal, The Dial, as the editor.
• While at The Dial, Fuller wrote one of her most famous work, The Great Lawsuit.
Writing StyleFeminist , women’s education, equal rightsReformation of social levels (prisoners, homeless) Psychological well-being of the individualBelieved in the possibility of change
Elizabeth Peabody• Born in Billerica, MA.• Worked as an assistant teacher
for Amos Alcott in the Temple School in Boston.
• After the school closed, she published one of her most famous works, Record of a School.
• She opened a bookstore, where she met Margaret Fuller and hosted a series of meetings called “Conversations” with Margaret Fuller.
• She then applied and earned the position of Business Manager for Emerson’s journal, The Dial.
• After the journal disbanded because of the lack of subscriptions, she opened up her own kindergarten.
Writing StyleWoman’s rightsfine arts, history, mythology, literature, and natureSupported the education of children younger than age 6
(later became kindergarten) Anti-slaveryled efforts for the rights of the Paiute Indians.
Amos Bronson Alcott• Born in Wolcott, CT.• Father of 4 children, among
them: Louisa May Alcott• Teaching himself to read, Alcott
spent a few years as a salesman in the American South.
• By the Age of 30, Alcott became widely known for his debating Thoreau. During this time he was also played a role in the Underground railroad.
• In 1834, he opened the Temple School in Boston.
• After his school disbanded, he moved to Concord, MA where he took part in The Dial, a journal ran by Emerson.
• At The Dial, Alcott published one of his most famous series of works, Orphic Sayings.
Writing StyleUtopian socialist (develop the best powers of body and
soul)emphasized the ideas of the school of American
Transcendentalists led by EmersonPlatonic philosophy, the illumination of the mind and
soul by direct communion with SpiritInfluenced the mid 19th century New Thought
movement
The DialAmerican magazine published 1840 and
1929, publication of the Transcendentalists (Transcendental Club, included Emerson, Fuller, Peabody, Alcott)
Outlet for modernist literature, vehicle for essays and reviews
Viewed as a political magazine, heavily criticized
Reestablished as a literary magazine in 1920 to include artwork, poetry, and fiction
Published writers like Ezra Pound, W.B Yeats, E.E Cummings, and T.S Elliot
Common Factors
Works CitedEncyclopedia Britannica. “Emerson, Ralph
Waldo.” http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/1911_Encyclop%C3%A6dia_Britannica/Emerson,_Ralph_Waldo
American Transcendentalism Web. “The Dial: A Magazine for Literature, Philosophy, Religion, and History.” http://www.vcu.edu/engweb/transcendentalism/ideas/dialhistory.html
The Literature Network. “Henry David Thoreau.” http://www.online-literature.com/thoreau/#