“Walden”: The «Art of Living»


Autoria(s): Soromenho-Marques, Viriato
Data(s)

03/07/2016

03/07/2016

01/11/2012

Resumo

Henry David Thoreau and his masterpiece, Walden, are both deeply embedded in our lives. It’s almost impossible today to perform a candid walk through the pages of the book that brings in its title the name of the beautiful lake, near Concord, without carrying to our contemporary reading the constellation of fears that haunt us. We are the fragile inhabitants of the grim and probably desperate, “Anthropocene era”2. How can we follow the thoughts and steps from the solitary friend and disciple of Emerson, without seeing him as a forefather of our anguish before the future, seemingly captured by the shadows of economic doom and environmental collapse?

Identificador

Soromenho-Marques, Viriato, "'Walden': The «Art of Living»", Philosophica 40 (Novembro 2012):41-44.

0872-4784

http://hdl.handle.net/10451/24275

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Edições Colibri / Departamento de Filosofia da Faculdade de Letras da Universidade de Lisboa

Relação

http://revistaphilosophica.weebly.com/2012.html

Direitos

openAccess

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/

Tipo

article