Building Their Own Waldos

Building Their Own Waldos
Author :
Publisher : University of Iowa Press
Total Pages : 217
Release :
ISBN-13 : 9781587299636
ISBN-10 : 1587299631
Rating : 4/5 (31 Downloads)

Book Synopsis Building Their Own Waldos by : Robert D. Habich

Download or read book Building Their Own Waldos written by Robert D. Habich and published by University of Iowa Press. This book was released on 2011-03-15 with total page 217 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: By the end of the nineteenth century, Ralph Waldo Emerson was well on his way to becoming the “Wisest American” and the “Sage of Concord,” a literary celebrity and a national icon. With that fame came what Robert Habich describes as a blandly sanctified version of Emerson held widely by the reading public. Building Their Own Waldos sets out to understand the dilemma faced by Emerson’s early biographers: how to represent a figure whose subversive individualism had been eclipsed by his celebrity, making him less a representative of his age than a caricature of it. Drawing on never-before-published letters, diaries, drafts, business records, and private documents, Habich explores the making of a cultural hero through the stories of Emerson’s first biographers— George Willis Cooke, a minister most recently from Indianapolis who considered himself a disciple; the English reformer and newspaper mogul Alexander Ireland, a friend for half a century; Moncure D. Conway, a Southern abolitionist then residing in London, who called Emerson his “spiritual father and intellectual teacher”; the poet and medical professor Oliver Wendell Holmes, with Emerson a member of Boston’s gathering of literary elite, the Saturday Club; James Elliot Cabot, the family’s authorized biographer, an architect and amateur philosopher with unlimited access to Emerson’s unpublished papers; and Emerson’s son Edward, a physician and painter whose father had passed over him as literary executor in favor of Cabot. Just as their biographies reveal a complex, socially engaged Emerson, so too do the biographers’ own stories illustrate the real-world perils, challenges, and motives of life-writing in the late nineteenth century, when biographers were routinely vilified as ghoulish and disreputable and biography as a genre underwent a profound redefinition. Building Their Own Waldos is at once a revealing look at Emerson’s constructed reputation, a case study in the rewards and dangers of Victorian life-writing, and the story of six authors struggling amidst personal misfortunes and shifting expectations to capture the elusive character of America’s “representative man,” as they knew him and as they needed him to be.


Building Their Own Waldos Related Books

Building Their Own Waldos
Language: en
Pages: 217
Authors: Robert D. Habich
Categories: Literary Criticism
Type: BOOK - Published: 2011-03-15 - Publisher: University of Iowa Press

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

By the end of the nineteenth century, Ralph Waldo Emerson was well on his way to becoming the “Wisest American” and the “Sage of Concord,” a literary ce
The Wisdom of Ralph Waldo Trine
Language: en
Pages: 607
Authors: Ralph Waldo Trine
Categories: Body, Mind & Spirit
Type: BOOK - Published: 2013-07-18 - Publisher: Simon and Schuster

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Ralph Waldo Trine was an important New Thought writer. His book In Tune With the Infinite is often cited as the inspiration for Napoleon Hill's Think and Grow R
Frank Lloyd Wright and Ralph Waldo Emerson
Language: en
Pages: 347
Authors: Ayad Rahmani
Categories: Architecture
Type: BOOK - Published: 2023-09-27 - Publisher: LSU Press

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Frank Lloyd Wright and Ralph Waldo Emerson: Transforming the American Mind is an interdisciplinary volume of literary and cultural scholarship that examines the
75+ Ralph Waldo Emerson Collection. Illustrated
Language: en
Pages: 6353
Authors: Ralph Waldo Emerson
Categories: Fiction
Type: BOOK - Published: 2022-03-31 - Publisher: Strelbytskyy Multimedia Publishing

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Ralph Waldo Emerson was an American essayist, lecturer, philosopher, abolitionist, and poet who led the transcendentalist movement of the mid-19th century. He w
A Power to Translate the World
Language: en
Pages: 368
Authors: David LaRocca
Categories: Literary Criticism
Type: BOOK - Published: 2016-01-05 - Publisher: Dartmouth College Press

DOWNLOAD EBOOK