EmersonHarvard University Press, 2003年5月25日 - 416 頁 "An institution is the lengthened shadow of one man," Ralph Waldo Emerson once wrote--and in this book, the leading scholar of New England literary culture looks at the long shadow Emerson himself has cast, and at his role and significance as a truly American institution. On the occasion of Emerson's 200th birthday, Lawrence Buell revisits the life of the nation's first public intellectual and discovers how he became a "representative man." |
搜尋書籍內容
第 1 到 3 筆結果,共 48 筆
... fact " corresponding to some " spiritual fact " ( " a lamb is inno- cence , a snake is subtle spite " ) . Two pseudo - sciences converge here : an older esoteric mystical conception of the liber mundi , the world as a book of symbols ...
... fact considered from you , from all local and personal reference , and discerns it as if it existed for its own sake . " Anything so transformed , any " fact " or " reflection " that thereby becomes “ disentangled from the web of our ...
... fact com- pete . He feared that emancipation would lay bare that the free Negro stood " in nature below the series of thought , & in the plane of vegetable & animal existence , whose law is to prey on one another " ( JMN 13 : 35 ) ...
內容
Emersonian SelfReliance in Theory and Practice | 59 |
Emersonian Poetics | 107 |
Religious Radicalisms | 158 |
著作權所有 | |
5 個其他區段未顯示