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America's Bachelor Uncle

Thoreau and the American Polity

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Emphatically revisionist, Bob Pepperman Taylor reveals a Thoreau most people never knew existed. Contrary to conventional views, Taylor argues that Thoreau was one of America's most powerful and least understood political thinkers, a man who promoted community and democratic values, while being ever vigilant against the evils of excessive or illegitimate authority.

Still widely viewed as a remarkable nature writer but simplistic philosopher with no real understanding of society, Thoreau is resurrected here as a profound social critic with more on his mind than utopian daydreams. Rather than the aloof and very private individualist spurned by conservatives and championed by radicals and environmentalists, Taylor portrays Thoreau as a genuinely engaged political theorist concerned with the moral foundations of public life. Like a solicitous "bachelor uncle" (a self-referential phrase from his journals), Thoreau persistently prodded his fellow citizens to remember that they were responsible for independently evaluating the behavior of their government and political community.

Taylor contends that, far from being confined to a few political essays ("Civil Disobedience," "Slavery in Massachusetts," and "A Plea for Captain John Brown"), Thoreau's political critique was a lifetime project that informed virtually all of his work. Taylor's persuasive study should send readers back to Walden, A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers, and the 14-volume Journal, among many other writings, for a provocative new look at one of America's most influential writers.

Open access edition funded by the National Endowment for Humanities and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Humanities Open Book Program.

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    • Library Journal

      December 1, 1996
      For those who think they knew the political thought and social significance of Concord's solitary wanderer, think again! Taylor, who addressed Thoreau's contribution to American environmentalism in Our Limits Transgressed: Environmental Political Thought in America (Univ. Pr. of Kentucky, 1992), offers a comprehensive and compelling portrait of Thoreau, the political and social critic. According to Taylor, "Thoreau is one of America's most powerful and least understood critics and political thinkers." Arguing that Thoreau's potency resides in his call for individuals to overcome their political passivity and perform their necessary and proper role of citizen-critics, Taylor effectively rescues Thoreau from the dustbin of American intellectual and political history. A passive public and a slumbering scholarly community should take notice of Taylor's treatment of Thoreau. Highly recommended for all libraries.--Stephen Shaw, Northwest Nazarene Coll., Nampa, Id.

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