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Transcendentalism!. Transcendentalism. Historical Perspective Sought to create literary independence….and spiritual independence Westward Expansion prevalent Social reforms prioritized (abolition of slavery, education, women’s rights)
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Transcendentalism • Historical Perspective • Sought to create literary independence….and spiritual independence • Westward Expansion prevalent • Social reforms prioritized (abolition of slavery, education, women’s rights) • Movement during the American Renaissance which included educated people. • Population movement from rural to urban areas • Time of Social Reforms ( peaceful)
TranscendentalismMajor Elements • The Individual • The structure of the universe literally duplicates the structure of the individual’s self • Know Thyself!!!!!!!!!! • An individual’s virtue and happiness depends upon Self Realization. • Power is to be obtained by defying fate/predestination • It is foolish to worry about consistency…
TranscendentalismMajor Elements • The Individual…..Self Reliance • For completion of Self..must have full understanding of emotional, sexual and psychological to achieve freedom/liberation. • Mandala:self is most accurately itself when all four parts in equal balance Ego Ego-emerging self • Anima Animas Anima=femaleAnimus=male Shadow Shadow=darker side of self
TranscendentalismMajor Concepts • Nature • Nature is symbolic…..pantheistic • Oversoul • Chathonic: “of the earth” born of dust, return to dust • God can be found in nature and human nature • Transcendentalism is a form of Idealism • Evil is Negative…Light (goodness) is more powerful than dark
TranscendentalismMajor Elements • Spiritual • The intuitive faculty(not rationality or sensory) becomes the means of conscious union of the individual psyche ( Oversoul) • An individual is the spiritual center of the universe • Individual may transcend lower animalistic impulses of life..moving from the instinctual or rational to the spiritual realm • The human soul is part of the oversoul/universal spirit • Oversoul/Life Force/God can be found everywhere • God can be found in nature and human nature • Focus on this life..not aferlife • Know God through intuition…nature • Death is a part of the cycle of life
Transcendentalism • Oversoul • Source of all good • Atma: each individual soul is made of the same stuff…from the same stuff..univeral, world soul. • “She did not go someplace…not away. She went out…everywhere.” • Interconnection of all humanity
Jungian Collective Unconscious Experiences that all humans share regardless of time, culture, religion (archetypes). Goes beyond human experience... Transcend!!!!!!!!!! Freud (just to compare) Oversoul
Transcendentalism • Influences: • Plato: idealism according to which reality subsists beyond the appearances of the world..that the world is an expression of spirit or mind..and IS GOOD. • Immanual Kant: belief in the “native spontaneity of the mind”…rather than the passivity of John Locke • Puritanism: ethical seriousness and (Edwards) suggestion that one can receive divine light immediately and directly. • Eastern Philosophy (Hinduism): • Impersonal, universal god who is omniscient, but not judgmental • no good or bad….just is ( no Original Sin) • Consciousness (not physicality) is focus • Use intuition • Cannot have spiritual experience through another..must obtain individually throught the self
Transcendentalism • Ralph Waldo Emerson • Expressed the advantages of a young land with its freedom, “innocence”, and access to laws directly through nature, not books. • Appealed to both intellectuals and the general public • Emphasized the connections between humans, nature and higher order • Emerson’s work is “plain” on surface, yet has depth and substance • Set up as collection of thoughts and memories, not organized essays • “I am a poet” • Born into cultured, but poor family who were religiously based. • Studied to be minister, but felt disbelief at central doctrines • Traveled to Europe…enlightened • Formed the Transcendental Club • After death of his son, Waldo, Emerson shrank from society
Emerson • Transcendental beliefs • Denied the importance of the past on present and future situations • Individual men and women were part of the “idea of man” • Since all things are connected to a larger whole, even the commonest matters could open a door to the eternal • Rejection of institutional religion in favor of a personal relation with God • God always close and reveals Self everywhere and at all times • Within each individual lies a divinity that allows human intuition to behold God’s spirit in nature • Correspondence between natural law and moral law by use of intuition allows humans to see God’s laws revealed ( in nature).
Transcendentalism • Henry David Thoreau Self “un-made” man • Born in Concord, Mass. In 1817 to a successful family • Grew up hiking through the woods of Concord • Graduated from Harvard as an above average student with a rebellious streak. • Stayed at Walden Pond for nearly two years to reflect upon his life and live it simply and close to nature. • Helped fugitive slaves make their way to Canada • Protested the Mexican War…refused to pay his taxes (which would support it) • spent night in jail • Moved back to family house to live the rest of his life. • Supported himself by doing odd jobs…masonry, carpentry, etc… • Died of Tuberculosis • “Henry, have you made peace with God?” “Why, Aunt, I didn’t know we had quarreled.”
Thoreau • Transcendental Beliefs • Believed that the epic journey of his day was inward…to live close to nature and live simply to rediscover integrity and greatness. • Looked to nature for a model of life and writing because it contained spiritual truth and reality • Possessed by a vision of perfect freedom in which one is their own master • Life, as much of his writing, is Paradoxical. • One needed conscience and the need for action to maintain it • Disliked hyprocisy