Transcendentalist Women - 1var ziRfw=0;function zIpSS(u){zpu(0,u,280,375,"ssWin")}function zIlb(l,t,f){var u=new Array([["1/XJ/W9","1/XJ/WP"],["1/XK/WB","1/XK/WQ"],["18/15m","1/XL/WR"]],[["18/15o","18/1Pp"]],[["1/XJ/WA","1/XJ/WP"],["1/XK/WC","1/XK/WQ"],["18/15m","1/XL/WR"],["18/15o","18/1Pp"]]);var p=l.parentNode.parentNode.parentNode.parentNode.id=="oC"?0:1;var clk;if(arguments.length==3){if(t==1){f=0}if(t==2&&!zIos(l.href)){f=3}clk=u[t][f][p]}else{var c=l.parentNode.parentNode.className;var t=c=="obE"?0:(c=="obS"?1:(c=="obO"?2:-1));var f=t==0?2:(t==1?0:(t==2&&zIos(l.href)?2:(t==2&&!zIos(l.href)?3:-1)));clk=u[t][f][p]}if(!clk)clk="18/15p";zT(l,clk)}function zIos(u){var r=(u.indexOf("&zu=")>0&&(u.substr(u.indexOf("&zu=")).indexOf("about.com")>0)||u.indexOf("http://")0)?false:true;return r}zOBT=" Ads"
zJs=10
zJs=11
zJs=12
zJs=13
zc(5,'jsc',zJs,9999999,'')
zDO=0
z930=zpreC(930,48);if(thin){z930=0};z160=zpreC(160,600);z336=zpreC(336,280);z728=zpreC(728,90);z155=zpreC(336,155);zItw=160;Search Women's Historyvar h2=document.getElementsByTagName("h2")[0];if(h2.getElementsByTagName("a")[0].firstChild.nodeValue.length>28)h2.className="long";HomeEducationWomen's Historyif(z930==0 && z728>0){adunit('','',uy,ch,gs,728,90,'1','lb',1)} Emailw(x2+zWl+'?p=1" zT="18/1[N" rel="nofollow">Print')Women's HistoryBiographiesIssues & EventsWomen's Rights if(z930>0){adunit('','',uy,ch,gs,930,48,'1','s',1)}See More About:margaret fullertranscendentalistsamerican women writers Transcendentalist Women Part 1 An article by your Women's History Guide, Jone Johnson Lewis When you hear the word "Transcendentalism" do you immediate think "highschool English class" or "Ralph Waldo Emerson" or "Henry DavidThoreau"? Very few, I'll wager, think quickly of the names of the women who wereassociated with Transcendentalism. (If Transcendentalism is new to you, or you'renot sure what it means, checkhere.)Margaret Fuller and Elizabeth Palmer Peabody were the only two women who were originalmembers of the Transcendental Club, but other women were part of the inner circle of thegroup who called themselves Transcendentalists. In this series, I highlight a few ofthese Transcendentalist Women: Margaret Fuller* Margaret Fuller (1810-1850)"Very early, I knew that the only object in life was to grow."Fuller's biography, not (in my opinion) yet adequately told anywhere on the Net, isrich and fascinating. Her father, disappointed that she was not a son, educated herin what was then considered the masculine style. She was intellectually the superiorof most if not all her contemporaries. (Ralph Waldo Emerson, a friend and colleague,made fun of her statement that "I now know all the people worth knowing in America,and I find no intellect comparable to my own." Of course, he felt like he wasone of the exceptions!) She often found herself -- as many over-educated intelligent womenhave -- without peers, without enough challenge.She came, as an adult, into the circle of people who would soon grow into theTranscendentalists. She was hired as a teacher in Bronson Alcott's school, wherefellow teacher Elizabeth Peabody became her close friend. She met the English authorand reformer Harriet Martineau who introduced Fuller to Emerson. James FreemanClarke and Henry Hedge were Harvard students who moved in many of the same intellectualcircles as she did.From 1839-1844, she earned a living by sponsoring her famous Conversations, to whichwere invited many of the educated women of Boston and surrounding areas -- wives of famousmen like Emerson and Theodore Parker, but also women who were developing their own workand careers, often as writers. Included were Lydia Maria Child, Elizabeth and SophiaPeabody, Ellen and Caroline Sturgis. (A series involving both men and women failed to havethe same lasting success as those attended just by women.)Fuller contributed art and literary criticism to the Dial, published by theTranscendentalists, and became editor of that journal at its founding in 1840. The Dialwas only published for four years, but was a turning point in American literarydevelopment.She helped plan and develop Brook Farm, a utopian experiment; though she never livedthere, she was a frequent visitor.In 1842, when she tried to remove herself from editor of the Dial, Emersonvolunteered to take over. But according to some sources, she continued to do most of theediting work until she left New England in 1840 to work on Horace Greeley's New YorkTribune as literary critic.In 1845, Fuller published Woman in the Nineteenth Century (see links below),considered now as a classic work of feminist writing. In 1846, she took up anopportunity Greeley offered to serve in Europe as foreign correspondent with the Tribune.In England, she met -- among many others -- the Italian revolutionist Mazzini, then inexile. After a stay in France, she went to Italy, where she involved herself in thecause itself. In 1847, her friends and family began to receive letters with a newbuoyancy and enthusiasm: Margaret Fuller was in love. Her lover, Giovanni Angelo,Marchese d'Ossoli, helped draw Fuller into revolutionary activism. By 1848, she waspregnant; after several months spent with their child, Angelo Eugene, Fuller left him witha nurse and returned to Rome and her lover.The Republic that she and Ossoli had been involved in creating was defeated in 1849,and Fuller, Ossoli, and their child fled to Florence. She began writing a history ofthe revolution. She claimed in letters to have married Ossoli; the exact date andplace are in doubt, and some scholars suggest that the marriage was invented to ease herreturn to society in America.With husband and child, Fuller sailed to New York. Tragically, just a few hoursoutside harbor, a storm drove the ship onto a sandbar. Just a few hundred feet fromshore, the ship broke apart. The child's body was later found; neither Fuller's norOssoli's ever was.Some links: Woman in the Nineteenth Century Not the most attractive background for the pages, but here, in web-readable format, is Margaret Fuller's best-known work, first published as an essay in Dial. Life Without and Life Within A collection of essays, poems and reviews by Fuller, published in 1869 by the New York Tribune and edited by her brother. Page image format. Profile From the web site for the PBS series, I Hear America Singing: includes biographical information, tidbits from her writing, and commentary on her by contemporaries. Brief Biography One of a series of biographies of Distinguished Women of Past and Present by Danuta Bois. Chronology A useful timeline of the events in Fuller's life. Research and Reference Guide Bibliography of written materials by and about Fuller. Includes a few study questions.Woman's Soul, Emotion and AllEssay on Margaret Fuller's book, Woman in the Nineteenth Century Margaret Fuller Society A forum for scholars and others interested in sharing ideas and information about Fuller.Mary Moody Emerson (1774-1863)Aunt of Ralph Waldo Emerson, her ideas had a marked influence on her nephew'sphilosophical development. A 1998 book, Mary Moody Emerson and the Origins ofTranscendentalism: A Family History (Phyllis Cole), uses the diaries and letters ofMary Moody Emerson to document her influence on her nephew.Daughter of Rev. William Emerson, minister of First Parish Church (Concord,Massachusetts) and of Phebe Bliss Emerson, daughter of the previous minister of that sameFirst Parish Church, Mary was taken at two to live with her grandparents when her fatherenlisted as a chaplain in the Revolutionary Army. He died soon after of a fever, andher grandmother died in 1779. Her mother remarried, but Mary stayed with herchildless aunt, Ruth Emerson Sargeant.She returned when she was nineteen to help her mother care for the children of hersecond marriage -- to William Emerson's successor at First Parish Church, Ezra Ripley. She moved to her own home (purchased with an inheritance from her aunt) in Maine,but at age 37 returned to Boston to live with the widow of her brother, William, ministerof First Church in Boston."Scorn trifles, lift your aims; do what you are afraid to do," she taughtyoung Ralph Waldo, Edward and Charles, devoting herself to their education. Her owneducation and reading helped challenge the intellect and moral development, especially, ofWaldo.She broke with her nephew in later years, not over his leaving the ministry (whichdisappointed her) but over his radical Divinity School Address in 1838. Shebefriended Henry David Thoreau, as well, and their journals reflect their conversations.While the Phyllis Cole book was hailed in the press as "revealing" supposed "plagiarism" of his aunt by the more famous nephew, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Mary Moody Emerson's influenceon Waldo has long been known and recognized, including by Waldo in his lifetime.Some links: Mary Moody Emerson and the Origins of Transcendentalism A brief outline of the book from its publisher. Emerson's Aunt Played Crucial Role in His Writing A press release from Penn State on the Cole book and its importance. Possible Reading by Thoreau to Mary Moody Emerson A brief note from a letter from M.M. Emerson to Thoreau.*graphics on this page from www.arttoday.comused with permissionPuzzled by what Transcendentalism is? Check here.More Transcendentalist women: The Peabody sisters, Harriet Martineau, Julia Ward Howe, Louisa May Alcott, and EmilyDickinson.Author: JoneJohnson Lewis.Title: "Transcendentalist Women Part 1"This URL: http://womenshistory.about.com/library/weekly/aa031599.htmText copyright 1999-2001 © Jone Johnson Lewis. All rights reserved.Previous FeaturesMore Women's History: Site index Biographies of notable women Women's History Encyclopedia Quotations by notable women Etexts andPicture Gallery Today in women's history How to link to this site Post questions & comments Related ArticlesWhat is Transcendentalism [ ]4-2: A Student's History of American Literature - Edward SimondsMargaret Fuller QuotesRalph Waldo Emerson QuotesQuote Ralph Waldo Emerson Guide since 1999 Jone Johnson LewisWomen's History Guide Sign up for my NewsletterMy BlogMy Forum zSB(2,5);Women's History Newsletter - Sign up!Discuss in My ForumzSB(3,3)if(z336>0){w(''+ap[0]+at[4]+as[0]);adunit('','','about.com',ch,gs,336,280,'1','bb',3);w('')}if(z155>0){w(''+ap[0]+at[4]+as[0]);adunit('','','about.com',ch,gs,336,155,'1','ps',4);w('')}if(zp[7].d){Dsp(zp[7],'ip')}if(zp[11].d){Dsp(zp[11],'ip')}Explore Women's HistoryMust ReadsWomen's History BiographiesQuotes by WomenWomen's History Picture GalleryWomen's Suffrage: What You Need to KnowToday in Women's HistoryWhat's HotMolly Ivins QuotesDorothy HeightCalendar - Today in Women's HistoryTranscendental Wild OatsJustice White - Dissent - Roe v. Wade Su...SearchBy CategoryAfrican American WomenAir & SpaceAncient Women's HistoryArt, Music, Writers, MediaFeminism, Suffrage, RightsLife: Family, Work. FashionMedicine, Nursing, HealthMedieval Women's HistoryMilitary & War: WomenPoliticians, Queens, LawsReligion, Goddess, WitchesScience & MathSocial Reform MovementsSports & AthletesWomen's History BasicssplitList(gEI('bc2').getElementsByTagName('ul')[0]); More from About.com Work Hard, Travel EasyThe best tips for business travelers. Dog CareGet tips on training and caring for dogs of all ages. 48 Hours in VegasPlan a hot weekend in Sin City. Hotel AdviceThe must-stay hotels worldwide. Browse All About.comprepareTools();zCi();validateForms(); Women's Historyvar h2=document.getElementsByTagName("h2")[0];if(h2.getElementsByTagName("a")[0].firstChild.nodeValue.length>28)h2.className="long";HomeEducationWomen's HistoryMost PopularLatest ArticlesAdd to: iGoogleMy Yahoo!RSSAdvertising InfoNews & EventsWork at AboutSiteMapAll TopicsReprintsHelpUser AgreementEthics PolicyPatent Info.Privacy PolicyOur StoryBe a Guide©2008 About.com, a part of The New York Times Company.All rights reserved. var tcdacmd="dt;da"; |
|