Search results for ""Author Margaret Fuller""
Trail Guide Books Trails of the Sawtooth and Boulder-White Cloud Mountains
£20.69
Trail Guide Books Trails of Western Idaho
£18.95
University of Illinois Press Summer on the Lakes, in 1843
£16.99
Tredition Classics Summer on the Lakes, in 1843
£12.99
Trail Guide Books Trails of the Frank Church-River of No Return Wilderness
£17.80
Dover Publications Inc. The Essential Margaret Fuller
£6.52
WW Norton & Co Woman in the Nineteenth Century: A Norton Critical Edition
"Backgrounds" reveals the experiential basis for the text through autobiographical writings and selections from Fuller’s recently published letters, journals, and "Boston Conversations." "Criticism and Reviews" presents a superb selection of critical writing about the novel. The critics include Orestes A. Brownson, A. G. M, Lydia Maria Child, Frederic Dan Huntington, Edgar A. Poe, Charles Lane, George Eliot, Margaret Vanderhaar Allen, David M. Robinson, Bell Gale Chevigny, Julie Ellison, Christina Zwarg, and Jeffery Steele. A Chronology and Selected Bibliography are included.
£23.84
Cornell University Press The Letters of Margaret Fuller: 1839–1841
This second volume publishes all of Margaret Fuller's letters written from 1839 to 1841—the years in which she first began to achieve fame as a writer and an editor. Addressed to such eminent figures as Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, William H. Channing, Elizabeth Peabody, and Frederic H. hedge as well as to Fuller's family and intimate friends, these letters record the years of her involvement in the Transcendentalist Club—a group of liberal clergymen and writers who gathered to discuss theology, literature, and philosophy. In 1839 the Club decided to found a magazine, The Dial; Fuller became the editor, and at last she had a forum for her innovative views of literature and of literary criticism. These are also the years of her famous "conversations" for women—weekly discussions of mythology which were attended by twenty-five of the most prominent women in the area. The letters chronicle the most emotionally turbulent period in her life. In the course of little more than a year she was rejected by the man she loved, Samuel G. Ward, who then married her close friend Anna Barker; she was rebuffed by Emerson as well; and she underwent a profound religious experience that she felt changed her life.
£86.40