Lives of Quiet Desperation: the Transcendentalists vs. America

LIT2420.01
Course System Home Terms Fall 2021 Lives of Quiet Desperation: the Transcendentalists vs. America

Course Description

Summary

In this course we will undertake a comprehensive survey of the Transcendentalist movement through a close examination of the major writings from this tumultuous time in America's intellectual life. We will read the major figures (Ralph Waldo Emerson, Margaret Fuller, Henry David Thoreau), as well as a host of lesser known members of the Transcendental Club (Orestes Brownson, Ellery Channing, poet Jones Very). We will also read some of the most withering critiques that the movement inspired, including Nathaniel Hawthorne鈥檚 satiric novel of the Utopian Brook Farm community, The Blithedale Romance. Over the semester, we鈥檒l explore the debate the movement set off among thinkers of the time and come to a deeper understanding of Transcendentalism itself, not just as a philosophical ideal, but as a radical new way of living that only could have flowered in the roiling America of the mid-颅1800s. Slavery in the South and appeasement in the 鈥渇ree鈥 North; the slaughter and forced migration of Native American peoples; foreign wars that drained the national coffers and snuffed out human lives; the triumph of profiteering and financial speculation鈥攖hese are just some of the preoccupations that made the Transcendentalists dissidents in their own country.

Instructor

  • Ben Anastas

Day and Time

Academic Term

Fall 2021

Area of Study

Credits

4

Course Level

2000

Maximum Enrollment

20