Changes

From Nordan Symposia
Jump to navigationJump to search
18 bytes added ,  02:06, 12 January 2009
no edit summary
Line 7: Line 7:  
The relationship between the mental landscape of the interior and the physical landscape of the exterior is a crucial aspect of the [[flâneur]] narrator's effectiveness as a literary device; it is also a subject that is explored at length in [[Thoreau]]'s essay "Walking." Here, the principles which he applies are not only applicable to his own practice of "sauntering," but can be applied to this study's definition of flânerie as well.  
 
The relationship between the mental landscape of the interior and the physical landscape of the exterior is a crucial aspect of the [[flâneur]] narrator's effectiveness as a literary device; it is also a subject that is explored at length in [[Thoreau]]'s essay "Walking." Here, the principles which he applies are not only applicable to his own practice of "sauntering," but can be applied to this study's definition of flânerie as well.  
   −
Thoreau was known to walk for several hours each day. In line with the [[transcendental]] belief that "a person's inner resources are sufficient to meet any challenge, that following the [[intuition]]s of one's own [[genius]] leads to unexpected success", it is not surprising that someone like Thoreau would find an unplanned walk into the wilderness to be a promising way of allowing his intuitions the freedom and means necessary to work wonders in his life.  
+
Thoreau was known to walk for several hours each day. In line with the [[transcendentalism|transcendental]] belief that "a person's inner resources are sufficient to meet any challenge, that following the [[intuition]]s of one's own [[genius]] leads to unexpected success", it is not surprising that someone like Thoreau would find an unplanned walk into the wilderness to be a promising way of allowing his intuitions the freedom and means necessary to work wonders in his life.  
    
Thoreau discovered these transcendental [[virtue]]s "in the realities of everyday existence, primarily through sauntering, a form of walking which lead to self-discovery and [[spiritual]] renewal" (Smith 130). Each walk for Thoreau "marked an attempt to discover within himself the thoughts and intuitions which would tell him who he was, how he was to live, and what his proper relationship should be to self, nature, and [[God]]". He considered these daily adventures to be a vital means of preserving his health, both physically and psychologically, and he developed the activity into an [[art]] form. [http://www.thelemming.com/lemming/dissertation-web/home/interiority-exteriority.html]
 
Thoreau discovered these transcendental [[virtue]]s "in the realities of everyday existence, primarily through sauntering, a form of walking which lead to self-discovery and [[spiritual]] renewal" (Smith 130). Each walk for Thoreau "marked an attempt to discover within himself the thoughts and intuitions which would tell him who he was, how he was to live, and what his proper relationship should be to self, nature, and [[God]]". He considered these daily adventures to be a vital means of preserving his health, both physically and psychologically, and he developed the activity into an [[art]] form. [http://www.thelemming.com/lemming/dissertation-web/home/interiority-exteriority.html]

Navigation menu