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Ralph Emerson

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Books by Ralph Emerson

The Portable Emerson

"I have taught one doctrine, namely, the infinitude of the private man."

Philosopher John Dewey called Ralph Waldo Emerson "the one citizen of the New World fit to have his name uttered in the same breath with that of Plato." Critic Harold Bloom called him "the most influential writer of the 19th century" and deemed him "The Prophet of the American Religion." Walt Whitman, Henry David Thoreau, and Nathaniel Hawthorne numbered themselves among his friends and protégés, while his central text, Nature, singlehandedly engendered an entire spiritual and intellectual movement in Transcendentalism. On a quotidian level, Emerson's quotations appear today as inspiration and commentary within discussions on virtually every subject, yet that visibility hardly plumbs the profundity of his influence. In short, Emerson's diverse body of work has done more than perhaps any other thinker to shape and define the American mind, divorcing it from the yoke of Continental philosophy by elevating nature and the individual over history and materialism.

With such a towering icon, the weight of Emerson's reputation and the cosmic optimism of his vision risk overrunning a presentation of that central Emersonian tenet: an individual in all his infinitude. In this update to Malcolm Cowley and Carl Bode's classic The Portable Emerson, editor Jeffrey S. Cramer takes a wider view of both the work and the man, offering key texts like Nature and The American Scholar, along with revelatory journal entries, letters, poetry, and a sermon, revealing a stirringly human Emerson that, like Whitman, contains multitudes.

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Nature

'In the woods is perpetual youth' Ralph Waldo Emerson

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