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Margaret Fuller
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Woman in the Nineteenth Century
Margaret Fuller
1845
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Viewing 1–12 of 12
“To Eat This Big Universe as Her Oyster”
Margaret Fuller and the first major work of American feminism.
by
Randall Fuller
via
The Public Domain Review
on
October 29, 2024
The Conflicted Love Letters of Ralph Waldo Emerson and Margaret Fuller
How an intense unclassifiable relationship shaped the history of modern thought.
by
Maria Popova
via
The Marginalian
on
June 5, 2019
Margaret Fuller on the Social Value of Intellectual Labor and Why Artists Ought to Be Paid
“The circulating medium… is abused like all good things, but without it you would not have had your Horace and Virgil.”
by
Maria Popova
via
The Marginalian
on
May 23, 2019
How Young America Came to Love Beethoven
On the 250th anniversary of the famous composer’s birth, the story of how his music first took hold across the Atlantic.
by
Nora McGreevy
via
Smithsonian
on
December 16, 2020
Lampooning Political Women
For as long as women have battled for equitable political representation in America, those battles have been defined by images.
by
Allison K. Lange
via
Humanities New York
on
September 15, 2020
Buckminster Fuller’s Hall of Mirrors
Alec Nevala-Lee’s new biography assesses the complicated legacy of an architect better known for his image than his work.
by
Daniel Luis Martinez
via
The Nation
on
February 1, 2023
original
A Tour of Mount Auburn Cemetery
Two centuries of New England intellectual history through the lives and ideas of people who are memorialized there.
by
Kathryn Ostrofsky
on
September 7, 2022
New England Ecstasies
The transcendentalists thought all human inspiration was divine, all nature a miracle.
by
Brenda Wineapple
via
New York Review of Books
on
February 16, 2022
Emerson and Thoreau’s Fanatical Freedom
Why do the Transcendentalists still have an outsize influence on American culture?
by
Sarah Blackwood
via
The New Republic
on
January 6, 2022
Emerson Didn’t Practice the Self-Reliance He Preached
How Transcendentalism, the American philosophy that championed the individual, caught on in tight-knit Concord, Massachusetts.
by
Mark Greif
via
The Atlantic
on
November 9, 2021
How the Camera Introduced Americans to Their Heroines
A new show at the National Portrait Gallery spotlights figures including Harriet Beecher Stowe, Lucretia Mott and Margaret Fuller.
by
Meilan Solly
via
Smithsonian
on
July 9, 2019
Darwin's Early Adopters
A new book argues that Darwin failed to capture the American imagination because of the untimely death of Henry David Thoreau.
by
John Hay
via
Public Books
on
April 5, 2017