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The Letters of Margaret Fuller

1842-1844

The Letters of Margaret Fuller( )
Author: Fuller, Margaret
Editor: Hudspeth, Robert N.
ISBN:978-0-8014-1707-8
Publication Date:Nov 1984
Publisher:Cornell University Press
Book Format:Hardback
List Price:USD $106.95
Book Description:

Volume Three.

Book Details
Pages:272
Detailed Subjects: Biography & Autobiography / Literary Figures
Physical Dimensions (W X L X H):6.12 x 9.25 x 0.88 Inches
Book Weight:1.995 Pounds
Author Biography
Fuller, Margaret (Author)
Born in Cambridgeport, Massachusetts, young Fuller was subjected to a severe educational regimen by her father, who was determined to treat his daughter's mind no differently from that of the son he had desired. By the age of eight, Fuller was reading the Latin classics and was soon proficient in several modern European languages. She was especially interested in modern German literature, a passion that brought her to the attention of the New England Transcendentalists, who were attempting at the time to redefine human experiences. With Ralph Waldo Emerson, she founded, and for a while edited, The Dial (1840--1842), the quarterly magazine of literature, philosophy, and religion that had grown out of the meetings of the Transcendental Club in Boston. Also about this time, she began conducting a series of Saturday afternoon "Conversations," discussions of intellectual and literary topics that soon gained great popularity, especially among upper-middle-class Boston women. From these experiences developed her advanced feminist views as elucidated in Woman in the Nineteenth Century (1845). In 1844 Horace Greeley, editor of the New York Tribune, one of the most important newspapers in the nation, hired her to join his staff, and, during the next two years in New York, Fuller gained national prominence as a critic of art and literature. Some of her essays were reprinted in Papers on Literature and Art (1846), one of the most astute works of criticism to appear in the United States before the Civil War.

In August 1846, Fuller sailed for Europe, where she was to act as correspondent for the Tribune. These were tumultuous, revolutionary times in Europe, and Fuller soon added her voice to the republican cause that was challengi



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