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  • Coming soon
Publisher:
Cambridge University Press
Expected online publication date:
August 2024
Print publication year:
2024
Online ISBN:
9781009504867

Book description

Kenneth S. Sacks explores how America's first public intellectual, determined to live self-reliantly, wrestled with his personal philosophy and eventually supported collective action to abolish slavery. Ralph Waldo Emerson was successful in creating a national audience for his philosophy, and enjoyed the material and social rewards of that success. However, contrary to other Emerson scholars, Sacks argues that Emerson resisted active abolition for much longer than is currently thought, and did not become a supporter until events forced his hand. Committing to the antislavery movement was risky, and it ran against his essential belief in social gradualism. Events in the mid-1850s, however, hastened Emerson's conversion, and he eventually became a leader in the movement. A welcome corrective, Emerson's Civil Wars enriches our understanding of Emerson's antislavery activities, life, and career.

Reviews

‘In this outstanding study, Kenneth Sacks probes the mind of one of America’s most brilliant and complex thinkers as he grappled with the most divisive moral and social issue of his time, slavery. Gracefully written, combining prodigious research with exceptional intellectual insights, this study is a must read for all with an interest in Emerson and his time.’

Len Gougeon - author of Virtue's Hero: Emerson, Antislavery, and Reform

‘In this original and ingenious work, Kenneth Sacks shows how the man of ideas, Ralph Waldo Emerson, was at once driven by personal sentiments and philosophical convictions to enter the political fray, advocate for higher ideals, and sustain the integrity of his own mind. In his acuity, patience, and generosity of spirit, Sacks once again prompts us to reread and understand Emerson in new ways.’

Robert A. Gross - James L. and Shirley A. Professor of Early American History, University of Connecticut, author of The Transcendentalists and Their World

‘Emerson’s Civil Wars is at once a bracing reassessment of his involvement in abolitionism and a compelling account of his literary career, offering rich insights into both the life and major writings of the ever-elusive figure.’

Linck Johnson - Charles A. Dana Professor of English, Colgate University

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