Lecture: The Meaning of American Literature – Discourses on Minerva
In this lecture, we explore and explain the meaning of classic nineteenth century American literature with Crevecoeur, Emerson, Hawthorne, Cooper, and Melville. Looking at the theme of the American Adam and American Eden in The Scarlet Letter, The Last of the Mohicans, and Moby-Dick, we discover American literature is profoundly skeptical of the hope and optimism that governs the American ideal of progress and perfection.
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Paul Krause is the editor-in-chief of VoegelinView. He is writer, classicist, and historian. He has written on the arts, culture, classics, literature, philosophy, religion, and history for numerous journals, magazines, and newspapers. He is the author of Muses of a Fire, Finding Arcadia, The Odyssey of Love and the Politics of Plato, and a contributor to the College Lecture Today and Making Sense of Diseases and Disasters. He holds master’s degrees in philosophy and religious studies (biblical studies & theology) from the University of Buckingham and Yale, and a bachelor’s degree in economics, history, and philosophy from Baldwin Wallace University.
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