Henry David Thoreau
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"When I wrote the following pages, or rather the bulk of them, I
lived alone, in the woods, a mile from any neighbor, in a house
which I had built myself, on the shore of Walden Pond..."Henry
David Thoreau (1817-1862) was a leading figure in the American
Transcendentalist movement and the era of U. S. literary emergence,
an intellectual with worldwide influence as essayist, social
thinker, naturalist-environmentalist, and sage. Thoreau''s Walden,
an autobiographical narrative of his two-year sojourn in a
self-built lakeside cabin, is one of the most widely studied works
of American literature. It has generated scores of literary
imitations and thousands of neo-Walden experiments in
back-to-basics living, both rural and urban. Thoreau''s great
essay, "Civil Disobedience," is a classic of American political
activism and a model for nonviolent reform movements around the
world. Thoreau also stands as an icon of modern American
environmentalism, the father of American nature writing, a
forerunner of modern ecology, and a harbinger of freelance
spirituality combining the wisdom of west and east.Thoreau is also
a controversial figure. From his day to ours, he has provoked
sharply opposite reactions ranging from reverence to dismissal.
Scholars have regularly offered conflicting assessments of the
significance of his work, the evolution of his thought, even the
facts of his life. Some disagreements are in the eye of the
beholder, but many follow from challenges posed by his own
cross-grained idiosyncrasies. He was an advocate for individual
self-sufficiency who never broke away from home, a self-professed
mystic now also acclaimed as a pioneer natural and applied
scientist, and a seminal theorist of nonviolent protest who
defended the most notorious guerrilla fighter of his day. All told,
he remains a rather enigmatic figure both despite and because we
know so much about him, beginning with the two-million-word journal
he kept throughout his adult life. The esteemed Thoreau scholar
Lawrence Buell gives due consideration to all these aspects of
Thoreau''s art and thought, framing key issues and complexities in
historical and literary context.