1. Emerson, Thoreau, and the Nature of Metonymy
On my reading, Emerson has his own more empirical, late natural history projects, work also left largely unfinished and generally neglected by critics because it, too, was found wanting, as Robinson suggests of Thoreau's post-Walden work, by a "New Critical celebration" of "formal and symbolic achievement." (9) I give particular attention to Emerson's late essay "Poetry and Imagination" (1875), a work whose commingling of natural science and natural history with a rhetoric of imagination recirculates various threads and pieces from Emerson's unfinished "natural history of the in...
- Word Count: 9971
- Approx Pages: 40
- Grade Level: Undergraduate