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    Oates v Emerson

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    Emerson V.S Oates Compare and Contrast: Different views on Nature In class out of the three essays we read I choose to do a compare-contrast between Ralph Waldo Emerson’s and Joyce Carol Oates’s essays. I choose these two because they both had different feels towards nature. Oates is against nature and Emerson is about becoming one with nature. Even though both have different meaning‚ both Oates and Emerson successfully uses rhetorical strategies such as appeal to credibility‚ emotion‚ and

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    2/25/2013 HW 8 Articles by Emerson and Calhoun Emerson first starts out by highlighting how we come to perceive those who are civilized and those who are not. He says we do this by negation. In other words‚ our civility is better defined by showing what we are not. For example‚ “savages” do not have religion‚ liberty‚ sense of honor‚ etc. “A nation with no clothing‚ no alphabet‚ no iron‚ no marriage‚ no arts of peace‚ no abstract thought‚ we call barbarous” (Emerson‚ 502). He goes on to say that

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    Ralph Emerson urges his readers to retain the outspokenness of a small child who freely speaks his mind. He also urges readers to avoid envying or imitating others viewed as models of perfection. Instead‚ he says‚ readers should take pride in their own individuality and never be afraid to express their own original ideas. In addition‚ he says‚ they should refuse to conform to the ways of the popular culture and its shallow ideals. Rather‚ they should live up to their own ideals. Emerson might have

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    Damskov 1  Detra Damskov   Instructor Kym Snelling  American Literature I  20 January 2015  Individualism in Emerson and Thoreau’s writing    Individualism is one of the main tenants of Transcendentalism.   According to  transcendentalist thought‚ the goal of individualism is to ignite our innate thoughts‚ inspired by  the divinity that is nature.  Consequently‚  individualism is in direct opposition to the average  person’s propensity  to form thoughts reliant upon other people’s value systems and views

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    come to the point that people depend on it. The irony is man believes that since they built technology they automatically have control over it. However‚ our dependency on technology is so overwhelming that we lose our control over it. Ralph Waldo Emerson clearly states this in his poem “Ode‚ inscribed to W.H. Channing. David E. Nye’s essay‚ on the other hand‚ presents the history of the advancement of technology that humans face. To be specific‚ Nye uses cases that involve Japan’s culture and traditions

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    Emerson and Thoreau are equally significant writers when it comes to transcendentalism. Both writers were part of the movement and genuinely believed that individualism is vital to having a successful and fulfilling life. In fact‚ Thoreau lived on Emerson’s property when he began constructing his popular book “Walden”. The two of them were close and shared the same theme that focused on nature and individualism. However‚ this is not the only thing that the two writers have in common. In Emerson’s

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    American Lit Emerson

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    fourth sentence to midway through the paragraph‚ the viewpoint is in second person. When Emerson writes‚ “To believe in your own thought‚ to believe what is true for you…” (Emerson‚ 132) it seems as though he is speaking to an individual across the table almost in a one on one conversation. His use of the word “your” and “you” is very direct within the context. With the words chosen‚ it seems as though Emerson is directing a talk to specific person. As the paragraph reads on‚ his point of view switches

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    Ralph Waldo Emerson

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    delighted by it‚ but that he also enjoys it. He explores the differences between how adults see nature and the way children view it. Finally‚ he once again states his love of nature. Ralph Waldo Emerson was not only an excited writer of nature‚ but an enjoyer of its wonderful aspects as well. In his passage‚ Emerson states that "Within [the] plantations of God‚ a decorum and sanctity reign‚ a perennial festival is dressed‚ and the guest sees not how he should tire of them in a thousand years." With this

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    Ralph Waldo Emerson

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    How would you describe the everyday observations you make in our modern day? Ralph Waldo Emerson one said “Perception is not whimsical‚ but fatal. If I see a trait‚ my children will see it after me‚ and in course of time‚ all mankind‚ -- although it may chance that no one has seen it before me. For my perception of it is as much a fact as the sun.” Ralph Waldo Emerson had an outlook on life that people in the present should truly focus on. He perceived people to be thinkers‚ although he felt the

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    Darrell Phifer Dr. Colin Clarke English 202-002 February 4‚ 2004 Ralph Waldo Emerson and Emily Dickinson were two of America’s most intriguing poets. They were both drawn to the transcendentalist movement which taught "unison of creation‚ the righteousness of humanity‚ and the preeminence of insight over logic and reason" (Woodberry 113). This movement also taught them to reject "religious authority" (Sherwood 66). By this declination of authority‚ they were able to express their individuality

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