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Thoreau's Morning Work - Memory and Perception in A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers, the "Journal", and Walden (Paperback, New Ed)
Loot Price: R830
Discovery Miles 8 300
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Thoreau's Morning Work - Memory and Perception in A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers, the "Journal", and Walden (Paperback, New Ed)
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A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers and Walden, the only
works Thoreau conceived and brought to conclusion as books, bear a
distinctively important relation to each other and to his Journal,
the document whose twenty-four-year composition encompasses their
development. In a brilliant new book, H. Daniel Peck shows how
these three works engage one another dialectically and how all of
them participate in a larger project of imagination. "Morning
work," a phrase from Walden, is the name Peck gives to this larger
project. by it he means the work done by memory and perception as
they act to shape Thoreau's emerging vision of a harmonious
universe. Peck argues that the changing balance of memory and
perception in the three works defines the unique literary character
of each of them. He offers a major reevaluation of Walden, which he
sees neither as the epitome of Thoreau's career (the traditional
view) nor as an anomaly (the recent, revisionary view). Rather, he
sees Walden as a pivotal work, reflecting the issues of loss and
remembrance that earlier had found prominent expression in A Week
and prefiguring the late Journal's vision of natural order.
Focusing on the two-million-word Journal, Peck provides the first
critical analysis that defines the essential forces and the
imaginative coherence in its vast discursiveness. The consideration
of memory and perception in Thoreau also leads peck to the issue of
the writer's modernity, and he explores the ways in which Thoreau
anticipates twentieth-century thought, especially in the works of
such great objectivist philosophers as William James and Alfred
North Whitehead.
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