Henry David Thoreau in Context

Hardback

Main Details

Title Henry David Thoreau in Context
Authors and Contributors      Edited by James S. Finley
SeriesLiterature in Context
Physical Properties
Format:Hardback
Pages:418
Dimensions(mm): Height 235,Width 160
Category/GenreLiterary studies - general
Literary studies - c 1800 to c 1900
Slavery and abolition of slavery
Environmentalist thought and ideology
ISBN/Barcode 9781107149229
ClassificationsDewey:818.309
Audience
Professional & Vocational
Illustrations 3 Halftones, black and white; 2 Line drawings, black and white

Publishing Details

Publisher Cambridge University Press
Imprint Cambridge University Press
Publication Date 7 April 2017
Publication Country United Kingdom

Description

Well known for his contrarianism and solitude, Henry David Thoreau was nonetheless deeply responsive to the world around him. His writings bear the traces of his wide-ranging reading, travels, political interests, and social influences. Henry David Thoreau in Context brings together leading scholars of Thoreau and nineteenth-century American literature and culture and presents original research, valuable synthesis of historical and scholarly sources, and innovative readings of Thoreau's texts. Across thirty-four chapters, this collection reveals a Thoreau deeply concerned with and shaped by a diverse range of environments, intellectual traditions, social issues, and modes of scientific practice. Essays also illuminate important posthumous contexts and consider the specific challenges of contextualizing Thoreau today. This collection provides a rich understanding of Thoreau and nineteenth-century American literature, political activism, and environmentalist thinking that will be a vital resource for students, teachers, scholars, and general readers.

Author Biography

James S. Finley is Assistant Professor of English at Texas A & M University. A former editor of The Thoreau Society Bulletin, he has published multiple essays on Henry David Thoreau on topics including environmentalism, abolitionism, and The Maine Woods. In 2014, he participated in the 150th Thoreau-Wabanaki Tour, a retracing of Thoreau's 1857 journey through northern Maine. In 2017, he served on the faculty of a National Endowment for the Humanities Landmarks of American History seminar: 'Living and Writing Deliberately: The Concord Landscapes and Legacy of Henry David Thoreau'. He has received fellowships from the American Antiquarian Society and The Thoreau Society.

Reviews

'The essays are consistently sharp, smart, evenhanded, jargon free, and accessible, their brevity (all are 10-11 pages length) lending each the quality of a tantalizing entree into an aspect of Thoreau's writing and culture. ... The collection demonstrates (in brief) the scores of fascinating ways that contemporary criticism sees and reads Thoreau. ... Summing Up: Highly recommended. Lower-division undergraduates through faculty; general readers.' G. D. MacDonald, CHOICE 'The genre more or less demands that the contributor's aim be to connect Thoreau with some extracted slice of the ambient culture, leading to a stackable set of conjoined or binary analyses: Thoreau and Religion, Thoreau and Technology, Thoreau and Native America, and so forth, an arrangement more exactly developed in the Finley collection.' Albert J. Von Frank, Modern Intellectual History