The concept of nature in American Transcendentalism: Emerson and Thoreau appropriating Kant
by Unger, Ulrike, M.A., FLORIDA ATLANTIC UNIVERSITY, 2008, 61 pages; 1460300

Abstract:

The objective of this study is to compare Emerson's and Thoreau's concepts of nature as they are informed by Immanuel Kant. In particular, this study examines Emerson's Nature, The Transcendentalist, The Divinity School Address, The Conservative; and Thoreau's A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers, Walden; or, Life in the Woods and The Maine Woods to analyze how their ideas of nature are anchored in Kant's three Critiques.

Emerson and Thoreau develop Kant's ideas and both arrive at an unlimited nature which is not bound to objects of form. While Emerson focuses on human nature in the organism, Thoreau is concerned with organic nature in particular.

 
AdviserPrisca Augustyn
SchoolFLORIDA ATLANTIC UNIVERSITY
SourceMAI/ 47-03, p. , Jan 2009
Source TypeThesis
SubjectsComparative literature; Germanic literature; American literature
Publication Number1460300
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