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John Brown

In Emerson's Antislavery Writings. Yale University Press (1995)

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  1. The problem of moral progress: The slavery debates and the development of liberal protestantism in the united states: Molly oshatz.Molly Oshatz - 2008 - Modern Intellectual History 5 (2):225-250.
    The slavery debates in the antebellum United States sparked a turning point in American theology. They forced moderately antislavery Protestants, including William Ellery Channing, Francis Wayland, and Horace Bushnell, to reconcile their contradictory loyalties to the Bible and to antislavery reform. Unable to use the letter of the Bible to make a scriptural case against slavery in itself, the moderates argued that although slavery had been acceptable in biblical times, it had become a sin. Antislavery Protestantism required a theory of (...)
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  • Emerson’s abolitionist perfectionism.Eric Ritter - 2021 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 48 (6):860-881.
    Philosophy & Social Criticism, Volume 48, Issue 6, Page 860-881, July 2022. This article aims to rewrite Emerson’s moral perfectionism – his anti-foundationalist pursuit of an always more perfect state of self and society – onto his moral and intellectual participation in the abolitionist movement. I argue that Cavell artificially separated Emerson’s moral perfectionism from his extensive, decades-long abolitionism. The source of Cavell’s oversight is his participation in the long-standing norm of dichotomizing Emerson’s work into the theoretical ‘essays’ and the (...)
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  • Self-reliance without self-satisfaction: Emerson, Thoreau, Dylan and the problem of inaction.Jeffrey Edward Green - 2021 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 47 (2):196-224.
    The idea of self-reliance is important not only because it is often taken to be definitive of the ethics of democratic individualism, but because its greatest theorists have been uncommonly forthright about a problem that, though familiar to ordinary civic experience, frequently gets ignored: that self-reliant individuality is a basis for not fully supporting otherwise endorsed social justice causes. This article turns to Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau and Bob Dylan who are unusual for so honestly reflecting upon this (...)
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  • Intuition: The “unseen thread” connecting Emerson and james*: Gregg Crane.Gregg Crane - 2013 - Modern Intellectual History 10 (1):57-86.
    Recent scholarly comment on the relation between Ralph Waldo Emerson and William James offers an either–or choice between conflating the two thinkers in a proto-postmodern, antifoundationalist cast or dividing them into mutually exclusive categories of idealist believer and relativist skeptic. Contending that neither of these positions captures the pragmatist adumbrations in Emerson or the transcendentalist retentions in James, this essay turns to James's annotations of Emerson's writings as a singularly revealing yet largely neglected source of information about the exact nature (...)
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  • Frederick Douglass’s Camera Obscura: Representing the Antislave “Clothed and in Their Own Form”.Henry Louis Gates - 2015 - Critical Inquiry 42 (1):31-60.
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