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“ We will walk on our own feet; we will work with our own hands;
we will speak our own minds… A nation of men of men will for
the first time exist, because each believes himself inspired by the
Divine soul which also inspires all men,”
----- Ralph Waldo Emerson

American Transcendentalism

   
The American transcendentalism was an important movement in philosophy and literature that flourished during the early to middle years of the nineteenth century about 1836 to 1860. Transcendentalism was also the rebirth of an intellectual and artistic life that was bound up with the life of spirit. The transcendentalists felt that something was lacking in Unitarianism. Sobriety, mildness and clam rationalism failed to satisfy them. Yes this movement began as a reform of the Unitarian church, trying to extend the views of the church to one of an indwelling god and the significance of intuitive thought. For the transcendentalists the soul of each individual is Identical with the soul of the world and contains what the world contains; This is known as the over-soul. Then this belief became the heart of the American Renaissance. Our Nations thoughts in literature, poetry, painting, architecture and music changed drastically in this time period. The main belief was still that Idea and reasoning is direct revelation. In 1836 The Transcendental Club in Boston, under the leadership of essayist Emerson, feminist Margaret Fuller, educator Bronson Alcott, and writer Henry David Thoreau. They opposed the strict ritualism and dogmatic theorem. The transcendentalists were influenced by romanticism, especially such aspects as self-examination, celebration of individualism, and taking the beauties of nature and humankind. The music is the almost the same as that in romanticism, except that the musician put an divine emotional feel to it. Their Utopian communities of Brook Farm and Fruitlands were filled with romantic style architecture. Here the transcendentalists could meditate with nature, though work and art. They did this to transcend the senses and attain an understanding of beauty and goodness and truth. In some ways transcendentalism was an attempt to recapture the American spirit. Though transcendentalism did not live up to the expectations of its followers, the total regeneration of social and spiritual life, it had a lasting impact on American culture. In the years after the Civil War, several of the transcendentalists were important in the reshaping the populous for decades to come. For example, Henry Ford dwelt on the disdain for convention and exaltation of self-reliant power. Gandhi and Martin Luther King drew on the Thoreau essay called “Civil Disobedience.” The only ideal that anti-transcendentalism has that is different is that it focuses and controls the darkness of the human soul. Anti- transcendentalists felt that transcendentalism was way to optimistic, and overlooked the evil that plagued man; so they embraced sin and evil, making their work very dark. The nature of the movement emphasis on heightened spiritual awareness and interest in various types of idealism. This is why transcendentalism has dominated the thinking of American Renaissance, and its resonance reverberated though American life into 20th century.