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Title: Social Reforms, Transcendentalism and Utopian Communities


1
Social Reforms, Transcendentalism and Utopian
Communities
2
Robert Owen A Declaration of Mental Independence
(July 4, 1826)
  • Robert Owen was a British utopian thinker
  • Widely regarded as the father of the Co-operative
    movement
  • During the early industrial revolution,
    competitive free-enterprise capitalism prevailed
  • Many workers were exploited
  • Long hours and low pay
  • Child labor
  • Deplorable working conditions
  • Owen purchased New Lanark Mills in Scotland
  • Established model factory
  • Paid fair wages
  • Employed no child under age ten
  • Free medical services
  • Built affordable workers' housing
  • Established schools
  • Provided religious instruction and recreational
    facilities
  • Many leading industrialists visited Owens
    factories and some even adopted parts of Owens
    system
  • Owen moved to the US in 1824 and established
    collective farming at New Harmony, Indiana
  • The farm covered over 20,000 acres
  • Owen called for a revolution in Western thought

Robert Owen
3
Robert Owens Vision of New Harmony
4
William Maclure Letter to the New Harmony
Gazette (May 17, 1826)
  • Disputes arose concerning the structure of the
    community and about religion
  • These factors led to an abandonment of the
    communal principle after two years
  • Josiah Warren, a participant at the New Harmony
    Society, declared that the community was doomed
    to failure due to a lack of individual
    sovereignty and private property
  • "We had a world in miniature. --we had enacted
    the French revolution over again with despairing
    hearts instead of corpses as a result. ...It
    appeared that it was nature's own inherent law of
    diversity that had conquered us... our "united
    interests" were directly at war with the
    individualities of persons and circumstances and
    the instinct of self-preservation..."
  • In a letter to the people of New Harmony, William
    Maclure, a leader in the community, discussed the
    problem of some doing more work than others, and
    the inability for some to feel themselves equal
    to those of a different class
  • As a solution to these problems, the community
    was divided into sub-communities
  • This division of the community foreshadowed the
    eventual failure of Owen's New Harmony project
  • By 1828, Owen's ambitious experiment at New
    Harmony consumed almost four-fifths of his
    personal wealth and eventually it was abandoned
  • Owen returned to England in 1829
  • He persisted in his efforts to better the lives
    of the working poor
  • Left a lasting influence on the development of
    socialist thought

William Maclure
5
Bronson Alcott's Maxims on Education (1826-1827)
  • Amos Bronson Alcott teacher and writer
  • Associated with the Transcendentalist movement
  • Attempted to embody his ideals
  • In his schools he introduced art, music, nature
    study, field trips, and physical education into
    the curriculum, while banishing corporal
    punishment
  • He encouraged children to ask questions and
    taught through dialogue and example
  • Founded a Utopian community, Fruitlands, in
    Harvard, Massachusetts, which only lasted a short
    time
  • Alcott's Journals display his wit and his
    unyielding optimism
  • In 1826-1827, Alcott wrote General Maxims for
    teachers
  • His maxims represent cautions and advice to
    teachers as to their role in and influence upon
    young minds in the classroom
  • They display Alcott's love for and devotion to
    children, and his belief in the ability of
    children to think for themselves
  • 15. To teach, appreciating the value of the
    beings to whom instruction is given
  • 21. To teach, gradually and understandingly, by
    the shortest steps, from the more easy and known,
    to the more difficult and unknown
  • 26. To teach, by simple and plain unambiguous
    language
  • 37. To teach, endeavouring to make pupils feel
    their importance by the hope which mankind placed
    in their conduct
  • 52. To teach, pupils to teach themsleves
  • Alcott's most lasting contributions were in
    education
  • Attempted many practices which today would be
    considered commonplace, but in his time were seen
    as dangerous

Amos Bronson Alcott
6
Orestes Augustus Brownson New Views of
Christianity, Society, and the Church (1836)
  • Orestes Augustus Brownson philosopher, minister,
    essayist, and reviewer
  • Became a prolific writer and commentator on
    social and religious questions
  • By age thirty, Brownson became a Universalist
    preacher and editor of the theological journal,
    Gospel Advocate
  • He published The Boston Quarterly and wrote his
    articles alongside such Transcendentalists as
    Margaret Fuller, Bronson Alcott, and George
    Ripley
  • His articles were of a literary, philosophical
    and political nature
  • His articles also appeared in the
    Transcendentalist magazine, The Dial.
  • With other Transcendentalists he participated in
    the Brook Farm experiment
  • Unlike the Transcendentalists he thought that men
    were sinful
  • In 1836 he organized the Society for Christian
    Union and Progress and published New Views of
    Christianity, Society, and the Church.
  • Brownson took exception to many tenets of the
    Christian faith, writing in 1840, that
    Christianity ought to be abolished
  • But, by 1844, Brownson reconsidered his brief
    aversion to Christianity
  • Brownson became conservative and adopted
    Catholicism
  • He then began criticizing socialism and
    utopianism
  • Many Transcendentalists were taken back by his
    conversion and began describing him as an
    "unbalanced mind
  • Brownson did not think that the major problems of
    the American experiment had to do with lack of
    liberty but with its abuse
  • He was concerned with virtue above all
  • Brownson wrote in 1864, "If you would make a man
    happy, study not to augment his goods but to
    diminish his wants

Orestes Augustus Brownson
7
Ralph Waldo Emerson Man the Reformer (January
25, 1841)
  • Ralph Waldo Emerson was at the center of the
    American transcendental movement
  • The major American philosopher of the nineteenth
    century
  • In September 1835, Emerson founded the
    Transcendental Club with notables like Nathaniel
    Hawthorne, Henry David Thoreau, Elizabeth Hoar
    and Margaret Fuller
  • In 1840, Emerson, Bronson Alcott, and George
    Ripley founded the magazine, The Dial, with
    Margaret Fuller editing
  • The Dial became the leading mouthpiece for the
    transcendental movement
  • Emerson, its editor for two years, began
    publishing his poems and essays in the magazine
  • By the 1840s, Emerson became recognized as the
    leader of the Transcendental movement
  • In addition to his writings, Emerson made a
    living as a popular lecturer in New England
  • Audiences were captivated by his speaking style
  • Emphasized self-reliance and nonconformity, he
    championed authentic American literature, and
    insisted that each individual find their own
    relation to God
  • . . . man as a reformer. . . our life . . . is
    common and mean . . . yet . . . each person . . .
    has felt his own call to cast aside all evil
    customs . . . and to be in his place a free and
    helpful man, a reformer, a benefactor, not
    content to slip along through the world like a
    footman or a spy . . . but a brave and upright
    man, who must find or cut a straight road to
    everything excellent in the earth, and not only
    go honorably himself, but make it easier for all
    who follow him, to go in honor and with benefit

Emerson Lecturing
8
Ralph Waldo Emerson The Transcendentalist
(January 1842)
  • Emerson developed a distinctly American strand of
    philosophy that emphasized optimism,
    individuality, and mysticism
  • Although he never read Immanuel Kant, the great
    German Transcendental philosopher, his work is
    reflective German idealism
  • Emersons Transcendentalism also resembled
    British Romanticism in his belief that a
    fundamental continuity exists between man,
    nature, and God, or the divine
  • In religious matters, Emerson rejected the belief
    in a personal God and developed non-traditional
    ideas of soul and God
  • He asserted in the essential unity of all
    thoughts, persons, and things in the divine whole
  • For Emerson, traditional values of right and
    wrong, good and evil, appear in his work as
    necessary opposites
  • He asserted that, in the individual, all truth
    can be discovered
  • He emphasized individualism and each person's
    quest to break free from the trappings of the
    world of the senses in order to discover the
    godliness of the inner Self
  • He also stressed self-reliance and independence
    and his emphasis on non-conformity profoundly
    effected Henry David Thoreau
  • Nature was also essential to Transcendentalism
  • According to Emerson, what is beyond nature is
    revealed through nature nature is itself a
    symbol, or an indication of a deeper reality
  • The Transcendentalist adopts the whole
    connection of spiritual doctrine. He believes in
    miracle, in the perpetual openness of the human
    mind to new influx of light and power he
    believes in inspiration, and in ecstasy . . . the
    spiritual measure of inspiration is the depth of
    the thought . . . so he resists all attempts to
    palm other rules and measures on the spirit than
    its own

Ralph Waldo Emerson
Immanuel Kant
9
Margaret Fuller The Great Lawsuit Man vs. Men.
Woman vs. Women (July 1843)
  • Margaret Fuller holds a distinctive place in the
    cultural life of the American Renaissance
  • She was a transcendentalist, literary critic,
    editor, journalist, teacher, and political
    activist, ultimately turned revolutionary
  • Fuller became increasingly linked to the
    Transcendentalist movement and befriended most of
    the leading intellectuals of Boston and Concord,
    most notably Emerson
  • From 1840 to 1842, she served with Emerson as
    editor of The Dial
  • Published in 1843, Fullers essay "The Great
    Lawsuit. Man versus Men, Woman versus Women" made
    a compelling case for women's equality
  • . . . If the negro be a soul, if the woman be a
    soul, apparelled in flesh, to one master only are
    they accountable. There is but one law for all
    souls, and, if there is to be an interpreter of
    it, he comes not as man, or son of man, but as
    Son of God
  • In 1844, Fuller became a book review editor for
    the New York Tribune
  • In 1845 she expanded her Dial essay and published
    Woman in the Nineteenth Century, which became a
    classic of feminist thought
  • In 1846, Fuller became a foreign correspondent
    for the Tribune and traveled to Europe
  • There, she met many well-known European writers
    and intellectuals
  • In Italy, she became involved with
    revolutionaries and decided not to return to
    America for a while
  • She fell in love with Marchese Giovanni Angelo
    d'Ossoli, a much younger man of the petty
    nobility and a fellow revolutionary
  • She participated in the Revolution of 1848
  • After the revolt was suppressed by conservative
    forces, she, Ossoli and their son decided to
    return to America in May of 1850
  • Tragically, the ship they were traveling on
    struck a sandbar and slowly sank just off Fire
    Island New York
  • Fuller, Ossoli, and their son drowned

Margaret Fuller
10
Ralph Waldo Emersons The Tragic (1844)
  • In this essay Emerson outlines the tragic
    elements of human life
  • According to Emerson, people should accept the
    fact that life contains pain, disappointment and
    frustration
  • Yet it is possible to obtain happiness despite
    lifes tragic moments
  • For Emerson, the development of personal
    conscience yields perspective and ultimately
    personal contentment
  • He has seen but half the universe who never has
    been shown the House of Pain. As the salt sea
    covers more than two thirds of the surface of the
    globe, so sorrow encroaches in man on felicity .
    . . the prevalent hue of things to the eye of
    leisure is melancholy. . . Melancholy cleaves to
    the English mind in both hemispheres . . . no
    theory of life can have any right, which leaves
    out of account the values of vice, pain, disease,
    poverty, insecurity, disunion, fear, and death.

Ralph Waldo Emerson
11
John Humphrey Noyes Bible Communism (February
1849)
  • At Yale, Noyes discovered the idea of
    Perfectionism
  • The idea was that it was possible to be free
    oneself of sin and achieve spiritual perfection
  • In 1834, he declared himself Perfect and free
    from sin which outraged others and his license to
    preach was revoked
  • He believed that the Second Coming was near and
    the Kingdom of Heaven could be created on earth
  • He continued to preach in Putney, Vermont and
    organized a community of followers
  • Noyes further studied the ideas of complex
    marriage, male continence and striving for
    Perfection
  • In 1847, Noyes was arrested for adultery
  • After several supporters were also arrested,
    Noyes left Vermont for Oneida, New York
  • The Oneida Community would survive until 1879 and
    grow to a membership of over 300
  • In order to support itself, the Community had
    many successful industries
  • They manufactured animal traps and silk thread,
    and raised and canned fruits and vegetables.
  • The Oneida Perfectionists believed in a special
    covenant with God, that the individual was to be
    sublimated to the community as a whole, and that
    an authoritarian figure should govern the
    communitys interests
  • In his essay Bible Communism, Noyes outlined
    the most important aspects of his religious
    philosophy
  • All members were equal and the economy of the
    community must be communist
  • The most famous rule was based on Christ's
    teaching that there would be no marriage in
    Heaven
  • Therefore, Noyes asserted that on earth all men
    were married to all women, and that the men and
    women in the community should be sexually
    intimate with a variety of partners
  • In June 1879, Noyes faced arrest for statutory
    rape and fled to Canada

John Humphrey Noyes
12
The Oneida Community (1878)
13
The Brook Farm Experiment (1841-1847)
  • The Brook Farm was located on a 200-acre dairy
    farm in Roxbury, Massachusetts, 9 miles outside
    of Boston
  • Founded as a transcendentalist Utopian experiment
    by George Ripley
  • It was conceived as an agrarian and pastoral
    utopia and was organized along the ideas of
    Charles Fourier, a French socialist thinker who
    argued that a utopian society could be created in
    which people would jointly share in the
    development of the whole community
  • Accordingly, the project was financed by a
    joint-stock company with 24 shares of stock at
    500 per share and each member was to participate
    in the manual labor in an attempt to make the
    group self-sufficient
  • The economy of the farm was based primarily on
    agriculture
  • The Brook Farm experienced a intellectually
    stimulating atmosphere in which such luminaries
    as Nathaniel Hawthorne, John S. Dwight, Charles
    A. Dana, and Isaac Hecker resided and giants as
    Ralph Waldo Emerson, W. E. Channing, Margaret
    Fuller, Horace Greeley, and Orestes Brownson
    visited frequently
  • Despite enthusiasm for the project, however, the
    Brook Farm imploded due to financial stress after
    only six years of operation

14
Ralph Waldo Emersons Criticism of Socialism from
his Lectures Historic Notes of Life and Letters
in New England
  • At the beginning of the 19th century, American
    intellectuals came under the sway of European
    socialist thinkers
  • In particular the ideas of the French utopian
    socialist thinker, Charles Fourier who advocated
    the extension of womens rights and the adoption
    of workers cooperatives
  • Also, the British industrialist Robert Owen
  • Both were considered by many Americans to offer a
    better method for organizing society
  • However, Emerson took exception to what he
    considered the rigidity of socialist thought
  • Although he admired both Fourier and Owen for the
    novelty of their thought, he nevertheless
    considered socialism impractical
  • Above all, he saw the greatest danger of
    socialism in its inherent stifling of
    individuality

Charles Fourier
Robert Owen
15
Henry David Thoreau Civil Disobedience (1849)
  • Henry David Thoreau was one of the best known
    transcendentalist thinkers of his age
  • Perceiving little difference between his writing
    and his life, Thoreau was also an extremely
    complex literary figure of many talents who
    turned to nature in a life-long quest for
    ultimate Truth
  • He met Ralph Waldo Emerson, who became a patron
    and advisor to him and who introduced him to the
    leading transcendental thinkers of the day
  • Through Emerson, Thoreau contributed essays and
    poems to The Dial
  • Although he could never make a living from his
    writings, Thoreaus work now comprises over 20
    volumes
  • His writing is rich and complex and intended to
    nudge readers to reconsider the beliefs that make
    up their lives
  • Politically, Thoreau was a lifelong abolitionist
  • He opposed the U.S governments war against
    Mexico, which he believed was merely a ruse to
    extend slavery
  • In 1846, Thoreau was imprisoned after he refused
    to pay taxes in protest against the Mexican War
  • Consequently, he wrote Civil Disobedience where
    he justified nonviolent resistance to the
    government out of moral principles
  • For him, morality was more important than
    societys laws at any given time and political
    institutions should be considered with skepticism

16
Henry David Thoreau Walden (1854)
  • From 1845-1847, Thoreau embarked on a two-year
    experiment in simple living by living in an
    isolated log cabin on land owned by Emerson
  • His intent was to isolate himself from society in
    order to reexamine its values and practices and
    his role within it
  • While at Walden, Thoreau did an incredible amount
    of reading and writing, yet he also spent much
    time "sauntering" in nature
  • Thoreau lived a life of simplicity at Walden
  • He supported himself through his own labors, and
    widely read the classics of world literature
  • In 1854, Thoreau published an account of this
    period entitled Walden, which became one of the
    great classics of American literature indeed of
    world literature
  • It offers a social critique of the West with its
    emphasis on consumerism and its widespread
    destruction of the natural environment
  • The book invites one to the examine ones life
    and to the realization of one's potential

Henry David Thoreau
A Modern Replica of Thoreaus Walden Cabin
Walden Pond
17
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