Education of the republic of uzbekistan termez state university foreign philology faculty department of english language and literature



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Plan:

Introduction ........................................................................................................5

Main part ............................................................................................................6

1. The Life and Background of Ralph Waldo Emerson …………………………………….6

2. “The American Scholar” by Ralph Waldo Emerson and its importance in American literature ................................................................................................................................11

3. Nature by Ralph Waldo Emerson and his images ............................................................19

4. Ralph Waldo Emerson`s contrubition to the American literature and his work importance ...............................................................................................................................................22

Conclusion .........................................................................................................25

Used literature ..................................................................................................26

INTRODUCTION

At the beginning of the nineteenth century an exaggerated emphasis on national and personal economic gain developed in America. [4.p1]

Many of the literary figures who motivated the American Renaissance of 1820-1860 denounced the national and individual American sociopolitical motives. While the majority of the American population was comfortable with the nation's execution of democracy, a small group of reformers, known as the Transcendentalists, recognized that the developing system was flawed. [4.p2]

The expression "the American Renaissance" was used by a very famous literary critic (F. O. Matthiessen) as the title for his 1941 study on the literature of the first half of the 19th century (and essentially on Emerson, Thoreau, Hawthorne, Melville and Whitman). Indeed, with Emerson and his followers, began a new period in US literature : after Cooper, who had created the US "romance", full of adventures and habited by the figure of the US hero, a group of thinkers, led by Emerson, very consciously proposed a definition of what a real US culture should be. According to them, time had come for a new writing ; historically, it was the perfect time for a real revolution in American culture. Indeed, the country was in full territorial expansion, economic and political development, but desperately needed a cultural and mental maturity. Those thinkers therefore wanted to break free from various influences that kept dominating the American intellectual life, and advocated a new era. [3.p3]

Ralph Waldo Emerson, a primary figure in the Transcendental movement, openly criticized the progression of democracy in America, promoting instead a philosophy that shifted the nation of many to a nation of one. [4.p2]

The founder of Transcendentalism was Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882), who was born in New England, studied in Harvard and became a unitarian minister (it was a family tradition) before suddenly breaking free from his Church, in which he felt stifled. Emerson, when he decided to abandon his position as a unitarian minister, did not become an atheist, but devoted himself to another sort of religion, if one may say so, that could be described as a personal and non-institutional form of faith, a faith that needed no church, no ministers. He first took time to travel in Europe, and became familiar with the fashionable European ideas of the time (essentially Romanticism and German idealism) ; he then came back and settled near Boston, in a town named Concord, where he became a teacher, a lecturer and a writer (essays and poems). [3.p3]

In his essay, Emerson outlines the essential elements for the development of the American scholar. [4.p5]

In the discussion of the scholar’s education, three kinds of influence are mentioned: nature, books, and action. [11]



1. The Life and Background of Ralph Waldo Emerson

Ralph Waldo Emerson was born on May 25, 1803, in the family of the Reverend William and Ruth Haskins Emerson. His father, pastor of the First Unitarian Church of Boston, chaplain of the Massachusetts Senate, and an editor of Monthly Anthology, a literary review, once described two-year-old son Waldo as "a rather dull scholar." (Emerson was called Waldo throughout his lifetime and even signed his checks as Waldo.) Following William's death from stomach cancer in 1811, the family was left in a state of near-poverty, and Emerson was raised by his mother and Mary Moody Emerson, an aunt whose acute, critical intelligence would have a lifelong influence on him. Through the persistence of these two women, he completed studies at the Boston Public Latin School. [8]

Emerson entered Harvard College on a scholarship in 1817, and during collegiate holidays he taught school. An unremarkable student, he made no particular impression on his contemporaries. In 1821, he graduated thirteenth in his class of 1959, and he was elected class poet only after six other students declined the honor. It was at Harvard that he began keeping his celebrated journals.

After graduating from college, Emerson moved to Boston to teach at his brother William's School for Young Ladies and began to experiment with fiction and verse. In 1825, after quitting the ladies school, he entered Harvard Divinity School; one year later, he received his master's degree, which qualified him to preach. He began to suffer from symptoms of tuberculosis, and in the fall of 1827 he went to Georgia and Florida in hopes of improving his health. He returned in late December to Boston, where he preached occasionally. In Concord, New Hampshire, he met Ellen Tucker, a seventeen-year-old poet who also suffered from tuberculosis. The two were married in September 1829, just after Emerson had been ordained pastor of the Second Unitarian Church of Boston. They were very happy in the marriage, but, unfortunately, both were also quite ill with tuberculosis; in 1831, after less than two years of marriage, Ellen died.[8]

By the end of the following year, Emerson had resigned his pastorate at Second Unitarian Church. Among his reasons for resigning were his refusal to administer the sacrament of the Last Supper, which he believed to be an unnecessary theological rite, and his belief that the ministry was an "antiquated profession." On Christmas Day, 1832, he left for Europe even though he was so ill that many of his friends thought he would not survive the rigors of the winter voyage. While in Europe, he met many of the leading thinkers of his time, including the economist and philosopher John Stuart Mill; Samuel Taylor Coleridge, whose Aids to Reflection Emerson admired; the poet William Wordsworth; and Thomas Carlyle, the historian and social critic, with whom Emerson established a lifelong friendship.

After his return from Europe in the fall of 1833, Emerson began a career as a public lecturer with an address in Boston. One of his first lectures, "The Uses of Natural History," attempted to humanize science by explaining that "the whole of Nature is a metaphor or image of the human mind," an observation that he would often repeat. Other lectures followed — on diverse subjects such as Italy, biography, English literature, the philosophy of history, and human culture. [8]

In September 1834, Emerson moved to Concord, Massachusetts, as a boarder in the home of his step-grandfather, Ezra Ripley. On September 14, 1835, he married Lydia Jackson of Plymouth, Massachusetts, and they moved into a house of their own in Concord, where they lived for the rest of their lives.

Emerson's first book, Nature, was published anonymously in 1836. Although only a slim volume, it contains in brief the whole substance of his thought. It sold very poorly — after twelve years, its first edition of 500 copies had not yet sold out. However, "The American Scholar," the Phi Beta Kappa address that Emerson presented at Harvard in 1837, was very popular and, when printed, sold well. A year after he made this speech, he was invited back to Harvard to speak to the graduating class of Harvard Divinity School. His address, which advocated intuitive, personal revelation, created such an uproar that he was not invited back to his alma mater for thirty years. Perhaps Amos Bronson Alcott best summarizes this phase of Emerson's life when he wrote: "Emerson's church consists of one member — himself." [6]

In 1836, Emerson joined the Transcendental Club, and in the ensuing years the group, which included Henry David Thoreau, Margaret Fuller, and Alcott, met often at his home. In 1840, he helped launch The Dial, a journal of literature, philosophy, and religion that focused on transcendentalist views. After the first two years, he succeeded Fuller as its editor. The Dial was recognized as the official voice of transcendentalism, and Emerson became intimately associated with the movement. Two years later, however, the journal ceased publication. [8]

In 1841, Emerson published the first volume of his Essays, a carefully constructed collection of some of his best-remembered writings, including "Self-Reliance" and "The Over-Soul." A second series of Essays in 1844 would firmly establish his reputation as an authentic American voice.

Tragedy struck the Emerson family in January 1842 when Emerson's son, Waldo, died of scarlet fever. Emerson would later write "Threnody," an elegy expressing his grief for Waldo; the poem was included in his collection Poems (1846). Ellen, Edith, and Edward Waldo, his other children, survived to adulthood. [8]

In 1847, Emerson again traveled abroad, lecturing in England with success. He renewed his friendship with Carlyle, met other notable English authors, and collected materials for English Traits, which was eventually published in 1856. A collection called Addresses and Lectures appeared in 1849, and Representative Men was published in 1850.

Emerson's later works were never so highly esteemed as his writings previous to 1850. However, he continued to lead an active intellectual and social life. He made many lecture appearances in all parts of the country, and he continued writing and publishing. During the 1850s, he vigorously supported the antislavery movement. When the American Civil War broke out, he supported the Northern cause, but the war troubled him: He was deeply appalled by the amount of violence, bloodshed, and destruction it engendered,

In 1866, Emerson was reconciled with Harvard, and a year later the college invited him to give the Phi Beta Kappa address. May-Day and Other Pieces, published in 1867, was a second gathering of his poems, and his later essays were collected in Society and Solitude (1870). [8]

As he grew older, Emerson's health and mental acuity began to decline rapidly. In 1872, after his Concord home was badly damaged by fire, his friend Russell Lowell and others raised $17,000 to repair the house and send him on vacation. However, the trauma added to his intellectual decline.

In 1879, Emerson joined Amos Bronson Alcott and others in establishing the Concord School of Philosophy. He often lamented that he had "no new ideas" in his later years. He also had to quit the lecture circuit as his memory began to lapse.

Emerson died of pneumonia on April 27, 1882, and, announcing his death, Concord's church bells rang 79 times.

Chronology of Emerson's Life



1803 Born May 25 in Boston, Massachusetts, to the Reverend William and Ruth Haskins Emerson.


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