A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers: A Classic Journey through Nature, Memory, and American Transcendental Thought - Hardcover

Thoreau, Henry David

 
9781515436706: A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers: A Classic Journey through Nature, Memory, and American Transcendental Thought

Inhaltsangabe

Henry David Thoreau turns a river journey into a meditation on nature, memory, friendship, literature, history, and the spiritual life. Based on a boating trip Thoreau took with his brother John along the Concord and Merrimack Rivers, the book moves far beyond travel narrative, blending close observation of the New England landscape with essays, poems, classical allusions, philosophical reflection, and deeply personal remembrance. Written after John's death, A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers is both a memorial and an intellectual voyage. Thoreau follows the course of the rivers while allowing his mind to range across mythology, religion, reform, poetry, friendship, work, solitude, and the relationship between human life and the natural world. The result is one of his most ambitious and unusual books: less famous than Walden, but rich with the same independence, moral seriousness, and searching attention to ordinary experience. First published in 1849, this work remains essential for readers interested in American Transcendentalism, classic nature writing, New England literature, philosophical essays, travel writing, and Thoreau's development as a writer. It offers a quieter but deeply revealing companion to Walden, showing Thoreau in conversation with landscape, books, memory, and the enduring question of how to live deliberately.

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Über die Autorin bzw. den Autor

Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862) was an American writer, philosopher, naturalist, surveyor, reformer, and one of the central figures of American Transcendentalism. Born in Concord, Massachusetts, he was educated at Harvard College and returned to Concord, where he became closely associated with Ralph Waldo Emerson and the circle of writers and thinkers who helped shape nineteenth-century American intellectual life. Thoreau's work joined literary art, philosophical independence, close natural observation, and moral resistance in a way that made him one of the most enduring American authors.Thoreau is best known for Walden, his account of living deliberately near Walden Pond, and for "Civil Disobedience," his influential essay on conscience, government, slavery, war, and the moral duty to resist unjust authority. His writing also includes journals, lectures, poems, travel narratives, natural history observations, political essays, and works such as A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers, The Maine Woods, and Cape Cod. His journals, in particular, reveal a lifelong commitment to observing seasonal change, plants, animals, weather, and the intimate details of the New England landscape.Although sometimes remembered as a solitary figure, Thoreau was deeply engaged with the social, political, and environmental questions of his time. He opposed slavery, defended John Brown, criticized materialism, and argued for a life guided by conscience rather than conformity. His influence reaches across literature, environmental thought, political protest, nature writing, simple living, and American philosophy. More than a century and a half after his death, Thoreau remains essential to readers interested in freedom, nature, moral courage, and the art of living with attention.

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