Reading with the Transcendentalists

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19th century American intellectual circles
A01=Philip F. Gura
abolitionist-era debates
Albert Brisbane and Fourierism
American intellectual history
American Romantic prose
antebellum reform movements
Atlantic world exchange
Author_Philip F. Gura
authorship and influence
biography and ideas
book history and literary community
book-driven social change in America
books shaping Transcendentalist thought
Boston literary culture
Brook Farm context
canon formation
Caroline Healey Dall writings
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circulating new philosophical ideas
Coleridgean thought
commonplacing practices
communal and creative book culture
comparative religion studies
Concord circle
correspondence networks
creative interpretations of religious texts
creativity sparked by literature
cultural history of Transcendentalism
cultural nationalism
cultural transmission
dynamic social networks of thinkers
Emerson and creative reading
Emersonian legacy
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eq_biography-true-stories
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
feminist literary history
formation of American identity
forthcoming
friendships sustained by books
George Ripley criticism
George Sand and Thomas Carlyle influence
George Sand readership
German idealism reception
headline disputes among Transcendentalists
history of the book
impact of British and European authors
intellectual biography of movement leaders
intellectual networks
interpretive communities
James Marsh and Madame de Stael impact
James Marsh influence
liberal theology
literary circles in Boston and Concord
literary criticism of Transcendentalists
literary influences on Emerson and Fuller
Madame de Stael reception
Margaret Fuller and spiritual community
Margaret Fuller scholarship
marginalia and annotation
media studies in 19th century communities
metaphysics in America
moral philosophy
movement toward American cultural foundations
nature mysticism
nineteenth-century New England culture
origins of American literary movements
pedagogy and self-culture
periodical literature
philosophy of self-reliance and nature
philosophy of selfhood
print culture studies
publishing history
radical social thought
reading as praxis
reception of European literature
role of reading in intellectual transformation
Romanticism in the United States
salons and symposia
Samson Reed theology
secularization debates
social evolution of American philosophy
spiritual individualism
spiritual individualism in early America
spiritual reform
symposia and book clubs in New England
Theodore Parker sermons
Thomas Carlyle impact
Thoreau and Dall as next generation
Thoreauvian studies
Transcendentalist networks and exchange
Transcendentalist reading practices
Unitarian dissent
utopian communities
Victorian-era criticism
women intellectuals in the nineteenth century
written word and communal identity

Product details

  • ISBN 9781625349606
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 07 Dec 2026
  • Publisher: University of Massachusetts Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Exploring the books and reading practices behind the creation of Transcendentalist philosophy and community

Transcendentalism emerged in early 19th century New England as a uniquely American philosophical, spiritual, and literary movement. Its first generation of thinkers—including Ralph Waldo Emerson, Theodore Parker, and Margaret Fuller—created a worldview that stressed the inherent goodness of the "self-reliant" individual and the presence of the divine in nature. These intellectuals gathered in informal symposia devoted to what Emerson called "creative reading," a practice that stresses the transformative potential of the written word that was central to the movement's emergence, growth, and spread. But what were these thinkers reading and how did it influence the development of Transcendentalism?

In Reading with the Transcendentalists, renowned literary scholar Philip F. Gura focuses on 10 American, British, and European books that were essential to the movement's thoughts, writings, and activities. Many of the authors of these books—James Marsh, Madame de Staël, Samson Reed, George Ripley, Thomas Carlyle, Albert Brisbane, and George Sand—stood outside of Transcendentalism yet profoundly influenced it. Others such as Emerson, Parker, and Fuller were the movement's central architects, whose writings in turn inspired the next generation, including Henry David Thoreau and Caroline Healey Dall. Each of these books challenged prevailing religious, philosophical, and social conventions in ways that resonated deeply with burgeoning Transcendentalist ideals.

Blending intellectual biography with book history, Gura crafts a captivating cultural history that reconstructs the dynamic social networks of the early Transcendentalists, in which ideas from the written word circulated, evolved, and acquired new meanings. The result is an rich portrait of reading as a creative and communal act, and an exploration of how books ignite curiosity, sustain friendship, and catalyze intellectual transformation. Through a carefully developed narrative structure that is filled not only with books and reading but with headline-worthy scandals, disputes, and falling outs and realignments, Gura traces the historical arc of a transnational intellectual movement that helped lay the foundation for the idea of "America."

Philip F. Gura is William S. Newman Distinguished Professor of American Literature and Culture at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

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