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Henry Thoreau, the Natural Man: His Distrust of (the) GovernmentHenry Thoreau, the Natural Man: His Distrust of (the) Government

Other Titles
Henry Thoreau, the Natural Man: His Distrust of (the) Government
Authors
손유송
Issue Date
2011
Publisher
한국현대영어영문학회
Keywords
Thoreau; moralism; government; slavery; disobedience
Citation
현대영어영문학, v.55, no.2, pp.301 - 319
Indexed
KCI
Journal Title
현대영어영문학
Volume
55
Number
2
Start Page
301
End Page
319
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/113719
ISSN
1738-7620
Abstract
As became a true transcendentalist, Henry Thoreau aspired to a highly moralistic, principled life. As much as his kinship with the natural world, his insistence on such values as freedom, independence and simplicity suffices to credit Thoreau with the makings of a natural man. Compelled by the inhuman institution of slavery, however, he declared disobedience to the government: he undertook to put American politics on trial for its perceived lack of humanity. That was his way of redefining his already reduced relation with the government and instancing his practice of morality as the higher law as well. His brush with the slave regime thus had the effect of lending an added impetus to his distrust of the political world.
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College of Global Business > English Studies in Division of Global Studies > 1. Journal Articles

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