Margaret Fuller, Body and Soul
Like Emerson and Thoreau, S. Margaret Fuller held Transcendental beliefs and endured a chronic illness. The Transcendentalists believed that, even while suffering physically, there is a philosophy that proclaims the inherent and inevitable dominance of soul over matter. Davis focuses on how Fuller...
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Veröffentlicht in: | American literature 1999-03, Vol.71 (1), p.31-56 |
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description | Like Emerson and Thoreau, S. Margaret Fuller held Transcendental beliefs and endured a chronic illness. The Transcendentalists believed that, even while suffering physically, there is a philosophy that proclaims the inherent and inevitable dominance of soul over matter. Davis focuses on how Fuller's intimate insights into pain's purpose illuminate "Woman in the Nineteenth Century's" conclusions about gender, embodiment, and suffering. |
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Margaret Fuller held Transcendental beliefs and endured a chronic illness. The Transcendentalists believed that, even while suffering physically, there is a philosophy that proclaims the inherent and inevitable dominance of soul over matter. Davis focuses on how Fuller's intimate insights into pain's purpose illuminate "Woman in the Nineteenth Century's" conclusions about gender, embodiment, and suffering.</abstract><cop>Durham, N.C</cop><pub>Duke University Press</pub><tpages>26</tpages></addata></record> |
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source | Periodicals Index Online; JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing |
subjects | Beliefs Diseases Embodiment Fuller, Margaret Gender identity Literary criticism Men Migraine Pain Philosophy Soul Transcendentalism Transcendentals Women Womens health Writing |
title | Margaret Fuller, Body and Soul |
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