3. Merriam Webster’s dictionary defines transcendentalism as “a
philosophy that emphasizes the a priori conditions of knowledge and
experience or the unknowable character of ultimate reality or that
emphasizes the transcendent as the fundamental reality” but for the
individuals that were involved in the transcendental movement it
meant so much more, it was a way of life.
“Although Transcendentalism as an historical movement was limited
in time from the mid 1830s to the late 1840s and in space to eastern
Massachusetts, its ripples continue to spread
throughout American culture. Beginning as a quarrel within the
Unitarian church, Transcendentalism developed a momentum of its
own as it questioned established cultural forms, tried to reintegrate
spirit and matter, and attempted to turn ideas into concrete action. It
spread from the spheres of religion and education to
literature, philosophy, and social reform. While the
Transcendentalists' ambivalence about any communal effort that
would compromise individual integrity prevented them from
creating lasting institutions, they helped to set the terms for being an
intellectual in America.” (Bickman, 2000)
6. “Ralph Waldo Emerson is arguably the most influential American writer
of the nineteenth century-the writer with whom numerous other
significant writers of the time sought to come to terms.” (Baym, p.488)
Emerson was the trend setter of his time, his writing inspired an entire
generation. His writing, Self-reliance, which teaches us to trust
ourselves, his other work Dial, which was a quarterly periodical that was
an outlet for new ideas in the transcendental movement, and most
importantly Nature which influenced a number philosophers and writers.
”Emerson’s immediate reward was having the book become the unofficial
manifesto for a number of his like-minded friends, who, over the next
four years, would meet irregularly and informally in Emerson’s study.”
(Baym, p.490) Emerson is also considered to be the “Father” of the
Transcendental movement because, as a Boston minister in the Unitarian
church he started to develop this new philosophy, one that encouraged
the wisdom of the human being over the church. Also Emerson was one
of the key figures in establishing the Transcendental club which was a
group of individual that meat to discuss the rethinking of spirituality.
8. The Transcendental movement was a movement that mostly affected the liberal
New Englanders and Henry David Thoreau was one of the writers taken in by the
movement and was most influenced by the Ralph Waldo Emerson, in fact in 1836
Emerson became a friend and mentor to Thoreau. “Thoreau understood that the
United States was breaking free of the intellectual chains of Europe. He took his
mentor Ralph Waldo Emerson's spirit of self-reliance and built on it. He also built
on the philosophy of transcendentalism--the intellectual movement that
celebrated heightened consciousness, the power of inspiration, and the divinity of
the individual--and melded it with environmental concerns and abolitionism.
Individualism, anti-materialism, environmentalism” (Bruno, 2005) Thoreau’s most
notable work, Walden, was transcendentalism put into action. ““In the pantheon of
American literary icons, Thoreau is our sternest disobedient. He stood alone on
his conscience against a nation of temporizers, coming out from a society that
could kidnap escaped slaves and steal land from a fellow republic. More, he took
such commitment to its extreme, preferring the isolation of virtuous self-reliance
to participation in a compromising social contract. Yet in Walden, his narrative of
withdrawal, he insistently characterizes his time alone in the woods by means of
metaphors of town life.” (Newman, 2009) Thoreau urges people to look inward to
find fulfillment which is one of the fundamental principles of the transcendental
movement. Also Thoreau wrote Civil Disobedience in which he discusses social
commentary.
10. “As literary modernism took hold in the twentieth century, Longfellow came to the
seen as unadventurous, timid poet; but such as assessment unfairly diminished the
achievement of a writer who saw value in working with (rather than against)
established forms and traditions. Viewed in relation to his own culture and his own
poetic aspirations, Longfellow established a metrical complexity outlook that belied
his persona as a soothing white-bearded fireside poet.” (Baym, p.643)
Longfellow, unlike Emerson and Thoreau was not a trailblazer in the transcendental
movement, but none the less his works reflected a respect and love for nature and
the transcendental philosophy. Longfellow's work A Psalm of Life is a poem that
encourages people to live life and not waste a moment.
11. The transcendental movement which was a philosophy that dealt with spirituality
and religion was short lived and predominantly centralized in the American
literary community but it created a great impact on world literature as a whole.
The transcendental movement opened the conversation in regards to
truth, knowledge and the American experience.
12. Baym, N. (Ed.). (2008). The Norton anthology of American literature (Shorter 7th ed., Vol.
1). New York, NY: W. W. Norton.
Bickman, M. (2000). Transcendentalism. In W. T. Mott (Ed.), Dictionary of Literary
Biography: Vol. Vol. 223. The American Renaissance in New England. Detroit: Gale
Group. Retrieved from
http://go.galegroup.com.ezproxy.apollolibrary.com/ps/i.do?id=GALE%7CH1220
000827&v=2.1&u=uphoenix&it=r&p=LitRC&sw=w
Bruno, D. (2005). Natural Life: Thoreau's Worldly Transcendentalism. The Wilson
Quarterly, 29(1), 125+. Retrieved from
http://go.galegroup.com.ezproxy.apollolibrary.com/ps/i.do?id=GALE%7CA1277
14135&v=2.1&u=uphoenix&it=r&p=LitRC&sw=w
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow: America's Beloved Poet. (2013). Retrieved from
http://www.eparks.com/store/product/10736/Henry-Wadsworth-
Longfellow%3A-America's-Beloved-Poet/
Henry Davis Thoreau Photos. (2012). Retrieved from http://kootation.com/henry-
david-thoreau-photograph-detail.html
13. Newman, L. (2009). Thoreau's Natural Community and Utopian Socialism. In K. D.
Darrow (Ed.), Nineteenth-Century Literature Criticism (Vol. 208). Detroit: Gale.
(Reprinted from American Literature, 2003, September, 75[3], 515-544) Retrieved
from
http://go.galegroup.com.ezproxy.apollolibrary.com/ps/i.do?id=GALE%7CH1420
089801&v=2.1&u=uphoenix&it=r&p=LitRC&sw=w
Ralph Waldo Emerson Photo. Retrieved from
http://secretebooksource.com/images/Memberpage/emerson.jpg
Transcendentalism. (2013). Retrieved from http://www.merriam-
webster.com/dictionary/transcendentalism
Web of American Transcendentalism VCU Department of English. (2010). Retrieved
from http://www.has.vcu.edu/eng/resources/transcendentalism.htm
Zach's Blog, . (2013). Nature and Self Reliance quiz. Retrieved from
http://zacharyb1112.edublogs.org/2012/01/08/nature-and-self-reliance-quiz/
Editor's Notes
Merriam Webster’s dictionary defines transcendentalism as “a philosophy that emphasizes the a priori conditions of knowledge and experience or the unknowable character of ultimate reality or that emphasizes the transcendent as the fundamental reality” but for the individuals that were involved in the transcendental movement it meant so much more, it was a way of life. “Although Transcendentalism as an historical movement was limited in time from the mid 1830s to the late 1840s and in space to eastern Massachusetts, its ripples continue to spread throughout American culture. Beginning as a quarrel within the Unitarian church, Transcendentalism developed a momentum of its own as it questioned established cultural forms, tried to reintegrate spirit and matter, and attempted to turn ideas into concrete action. It spread from the spheres of religion and education to literature, philosophy, and social reform. While the Transcendentalists' ambivalence about any communal effort that would compromise individual integrity prevented them from creating lasting institutions, they helped to set the terms for being an intellectual in America.” (Bickman, 2000)
“Ralph Waldo Emerson is arguably the most influential American writer of the nineteenth century-the writer with whom numerous other significant writers of the time sought to come to terms.” (Baym, p.488) Emerson was the trend setter of his time, his writing inspired an entire generation. His writing, Self-reliance, which teaches us to trust ourselves, his other work Dial, which was a quarterly periodical that was an outlet for new ideas in the transcendental movement, and most importantly Nature which influenced a number philosophers and writers. ”Emerson’s immediate reward was having the book become the unofficial manifesto for a number of his like-minded friends, who, over the next four years, would meet irregularly and informally in Emerson’s study.” (Baym, p.490) Emerson is also considered to be the “Father” of the Transcendental movement because, as a Boston minister in the Unitarian church he started to develop this new philosophy, one that encouraged the wisdom of the human being over the church. Also Emerson was one of the key figures in establishing the Transcendental club which was a group of individual that meat to discuss the rethinking of spirituality.
The Transcendental movement was a movement that mostly affected the liberal New Englanders and Henry David Thoreau was one of the writers taken in by the movement and was most influenced by the Ralph Waldo Emerson, in fact in 1836 Emerson became a friend and mentor to Thoreau. “Thoreau understood that the United States was breaking free of the intellectual chains of Europe. He took his mentor Ralph Waldo Emerson's spirit of self-reliance and built on it. He also built on the philosophy of transcendentalism--the intellectual movement that celebrated heightened consciousness, the power of inspiration, and the divinity of the individual--and melded it with environmental concerns and abolitionism. Individualism, anti-materialism, environmentalism” (Bruno, 2005)Thoreau’s most notable work, Walden, was transcendentalism put into action. ““In the pantheon of American literary icons, Thoreau is our sternest disobedient. He stood alone on his conscience against a nation of temporizers, coming out from a society that could kidnap escaped slaves and steal land from a fellow republic. More, he took such commitment to its extreme, preferring the isolation of virtuous self-reliance to participation in a compromising social contract. Yet in Walden, his narrative of withdrawal, he insistently characterizes his time alone in the woods by means of metaphors of town life.” (Newman, 2009) Thoreau urges people to look inward to find fulfillment which is one of the fundamental principles of the transcendental movement. Also Thoreau wrote Civil Disobedience in which he discusses social commentary.
“As literary modernism took hold in the twentieth century, Longfellow came to the seen as unadventurous, timid poet; but such as assessment unfairly diminished the achievement of a writer who saw value in working with (rather than against) established forms and traditions. Viewed in relation to his own culture and his own poetic aspirations, Longfellow established a metrical complexity outlook that belied his persona as a soothing white-bearded fireside poet.” (Baym, p.643) Longfellow, unlike Emerson and Thoreau was not a trailblazer in the transcendental movement, but none the less his works reflected a respect and love for nature and the transcendental philosophy. Longfellow's work A Psalm of Life is a poem that encourages people to live life and not waste a moment.