Writers throughout history have turned to a vast array of things for inspiration in their works. The Transcendentalist writers of the 1800s turned to nature in order to discover the higher truths of the world around them. By turning to nature‚ Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau came to teach others how to improve their lives by refusing to conform‚ expressing integrity of mind‚ and pursuing one’s dreams. These ideas changed many people’s understanding of the world and continue to do so today
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Emerson was a 19th century writer who led the transcendentalist movement with his beliefs in individualism and nonconformity. In Emerson’s essay‚ Self Reliance‚ he denounces traditional institutions like the “dead church” and encourages originality in thought and beliefs. Emerson perceives nature as a spiritual awakening that allows us to transcend from the ties of society‚ creating a moment of wonder. Nature serves as a haven for wonder and speculation‚ which encourages the reader to seek the same
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Explanation hw # 2 of a Paragraph from the "Nature" By Ralph Waldo Emerson In this paragraph from Chapter 7 in Emerson’s essay‚ Emerson talks about the importance of the spiritual realm that surrounds a human including nature and the theory of a man. The insight that I had from this paragraph was that the phenomena of nature put various questions in our mind about nature’s theory. It makes us wonder if everything that we see is just the way it exactly is. It makes
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Huckleberries‚ by Henry David Thoreau‚ in the story he talks about working with huckleberries and getting everything paid for‚ for example‚ clothes and his schooling. He got it all paid for by picking huckleberries. In huckleberries he expresses how people are putting up signs and warning pickers away from their huckleberry fields and have to go to the store just to buy them‚ when you should be able to just go anywhere and pick some. The country life shouldn’t have private huckleberry fields onto
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Life poses a good deal of difficulties when one tries to figure out the best way to live it through its many facets. Over time philosophers and thinkers have come up with their own formulas and ideas‚ some more attractive than others. One of these thinkers‚ Henry David Thoreau‚ came around with his own formula in the nineteenth century‚ his ideas the product of earlier thinkers‚ like Ralph Waldo Emerson. These ideas included the notion that man is basically good and should think and live independently
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In Thoreau’s “Solitude‚” Thoreau continuously insists that human society should revert back to living a life of solitude in the unrefined depths of nature because we’ve become too materialistic. However‚ I would qualify this ideology due to the fact that individuals do tend to spend too much time with technology and have a materialistic mindset‚ but they do not have to live alone in the woods to change. Thoreau comments that “Society is too cheap‚” and this statement can still be made today because
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The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock “A reader’s response to a text is influenced by that responder’s social‚ cultural and historical context” Choosing one of T.S Eliot’s poems set for study‚ consider to what extent your personal response to your chosen poem has been shaped by the enduring power of its intellectual and artistic qualities. (Quote) “There will be time‚ there will be time To prepare a face to meet the faces that you meet;” Good morning /Afternoon Ms and fellow classmates. A
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Question: Part A: Analyze the social and historical context of a particular poem Poem: T. S. Eliot‚ ‘The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock The context of any given text whether poetry‚ novels or a movie is always integral to its understanding. Social and historical context of not only the given text‚ but the writer’s context and reader’s context play an important role in the interpretation and understanding of the major ideas‚ issues‚ values and beliefs within the text. T.S (Thomas Stearns) Eliot
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“The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock” T.S. Eliot’s “The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock”‚ is a dramatic monologue in which the speaker recalls his insecurities in dealing with the opposite sex and the choices he made in general in his life. He wonders if he should have done things differently. Prufrock starts in a city-scape “Like a patient etherised upon a table;/ Let us go‚ through certain half-deserted streets” and ends on a beach “I shall wear white flannel trousers‚ and walk upon the beach
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In T. S Eliot’s literary work‚ “The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock” is introduced with an epigraph from Dante’s Inferno to support the protagonist’s paralysis and the futility of life. The poem is considered a vital work in post modern art used to deconstruct and dehumanize the protagonist’s subjectivity. The epigraph from Dante’s Inferno is quoted by a man trapped in the eighth circle of Dante’s fictional construct of Hell and shares similar existential outlooks on the purpose of life. The epigraph
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