LEADER 02842cam a2200337 4500001 000027609 003 DE-576 005 20200617011627.0 007 tu 008 100802s2008 xxk 001 0 eng c 020 9780521710022 |cpbk 020 9780521883696 |chbk 020 9780511402661 |cebook 041 0 eng 084 2 A 8.5.3 |qDE-Y10 |2mpilcs 084 2 A 8.2 |qDE-Y10 |2mpilcs 245 00 Emerson : |bpolitical writings / |cEdited by Kenneth S. Sacks. 260 Cambridge : |bCambridge University Press, |c2008. 300 XXXVI, 237 p. ; |c22cm. 490 1 Cambridge texts in the history of political thought 505 0 • Acknowledgements • Biography • Background to texts • Introduction to texts • Texts - Nature: Introduction and 'Language': • 1. Journal entries • 2. American Scholar • 3. The Divinity School Address • 4. 'Uriel' • 5. “Concord Hymn” • 6. Letter to Martin van Buren • 7. 'Self-Reliance' • 8. 'Compensation' • 9. Concerning Brook Farm • 10. 'Man the Reformer' • 11. 'Politics' • 12. Journal entries • 13. 'Ode Inscribed to W. H. Channing' • 14. 'Citizens of Concord' • 15. 'Webster' '1854' • 16. Journal entries • 17. 'Women' • 18. 'Napoleon' • 19. 'Speech at the meeting to aid John Brown' • 20. 'John Brown' • 21. 'Fate' • 22. 'Power' • 23. Journal entries • Chronology • Bibliography. 520 3 Ralph Waldo Emerson is the central figure in American political thought. Until recently, his vast influence was most often measured by its impact on literature, philosophy and aesthetics. In particular, Emerson is largely responsible for introducing idealism into America in the form of living one's life self-reliantly. But in the past few decades, critics have increasingly come to realize that Emerson played a key role in abolitionism and other social movements around the time of the American Civil War. This selection for Cambridge Texts in the History of Political Thought highlights not only Emerson's practical political involvement, but also examines the philosophical basis of his political writings. All of the usual series features are included, with a concise introduction, notes for further reading, chronology and apparatus designed to assist undergraduate and graduate readers studying this greatest of American thinkers for the first time. 700 1 Sacks, Kenneth |d1947- 830 0 Cambridge texts in the history of political thought 856 40 |uhttp://assets.cambridge.org/97805218/83696/toc/9780521883696_toc.pdf |yTable of contents