The American Scholar The American Scholar

The American Scholar

    • 4.0 • 1 Rating
    • $0.99

Publisher Description

"The American Scholar" was a speech given by Ralph Waldo Emerson on August 31, 1837, to the Phi Beta Kappa Society of Harvard College at the First Parish in Cambridge in Cambridge, Massachusetts. He was invited to speak in recognition of his groundbreaking work Nature, published a year earlier, in which he established a new way for America's fledgling society to regard the world. Sixty years after declaring independence, American culture was still heavily influenced by Europe, and Emerson, for possibly the first time in the country's history, provided a visionary philosophical framework for escaping "from under its iron lids" and building a new, distinctly American cultural identity.

GENRE
Fiction & Literature
RELEASED
2018
July 5
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
31
Pages
PUBLISHER
Fix Pub
SELLER
MEDIA GALAXY LIMITED
SIZE
1.6
MB
Selected Essays Selected Essays
1982
Ralph Waldo Emerson Ralph Waldo Emerson
1990
The Greatest Works of Ralph Waldo Emerson The Greatest Works of Ralph Waldo Emerson
2018
Harvard Classics Volume 28: Essays English and American Harvard Classics Volume 28: Essays English and American
2012
The Complete Works of Friedrich Nietzsche The Complete Works of Friedrich Nietzsche
2020
Human, All Too Human by Friedrich Nietzsche - Delphi Classics (Illustrated) Human, All Too Human by Friedrich Nietzsche - Delphi Classics (Illustrated)
2017
Essays Essays
1580
Self Reliance Self Reliance
2014
Poems Poems
1847
Nature Nature
1836
Essays — First Series Essays — First Series
1882
Essays — Second Series Essays — Second Series
1882