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Journal of Homosexuality, 1991
Although Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862) has often been described as lacking in sexual drive or at most a rather reluctant heterosexual, a close study of his life and writings indicates the presence of a pronounced vein of homoeroticism--although there seems to be no concrete evidence of any homosexual activity on his part.
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Although Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862) has often been described as lacking in sexual drive or at most a rather reluctant heterosexual, a close study of his life and writings indicates the presence of a pronounced vein of homoeroticism--although there seems to be no concrete evidence of any homosexual activity on his part.
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Thoreau's Hallucinated Mountain
The Psychoanalytic Review, 2004“I do not invent in the least,” Thoreau insisted about his hallucinated mountain, “but state exactly what I see. I can see its general outline as plainly now in my mind as that of Wachusett” (Harding & Bode, 1974, p. 498). Thoreau’s hallucination of an enormous mountain (“in the easterly part of our town, where no high hill actually is”) recurred some ...
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The New England Quarterly, 2019
Recent Thoreau scholarship is remarkable for breakthroughs in the study of his life, writing, and scientific pursuits and for conceiving this proverbial outlier's genius as expressing itself within norms of family, community, discipline. Studies of the political Thoreau test the limits variously set by Walls, Gross, Thorson, Arsić, and others.
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Recent Thoreau scholarship is remarkable for breakthroughs in the study of his life, writing, and scientific pursuits and for conceiving this proverbial outlier's genius as expressing itself within norms of family, community, discipline. Studies of the political Thoreau test the limits variously set by Walls, Gross, Thorson, Arsić, and others.
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2021
Abstract In his famous book Walden, or Life in the Woods, Henry David Thoreau writes about the experience of walking through a rainbow. Since Thoreau is often praised for the accuracy of his observations of natural phenomena, what are we to make of this plainly unscientific description of a rainbow?
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Abstract In his famous book Walden, or Life in the Woods, Henry David Thoreau writes about the experience of walking through a rainbow. Since Thoreau is often praised for the accuracy of his observations of natural phenomena, what are we to make of this plainly unscientific description of a rainbow?
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Philosophy and Literature, 2013
According to Stanley Cavell, Thoreau finished the job Kant started. He shows us the externality of the world, of the "other"—the noumena, in Kant's parlance—while Kant only deduced the things-in-themselves as limits or conditions of knowledge. Insomuch as Thoreau pulls this off at Walden and in Walden , his contact is evanescent and he uses evanescence,
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According to Stanley Cavell, Thoreau finished the job Kant started. He shows us the externality of the world, of the "other"—the noumena, in Kant's parlance—while Kant only deduced the things-in-themselves as limits or conditions of knowledge. Insomuch as Thoreau pulls this off at Walden and in Walden , his contact is evanescent and he uses evanescence,
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