Recent Articles



































The American Scholar



         


The American Scholar was a speech given by Ralph Waldo Emerson in 1837 to the Phi Beta Kappa society in Cambridge. He was invited to speak as a result of his ground breaking work, Nature, published a year earlier in which he established a new way for America's historically-young society to look at the world. The American culture was still heavily influenced by Europe 60 years after declaring independence, and Emerson was, for the first time in the country's history, providing a roadmap on how to escape from underneath that veil and build a new, American identity. Oliver Wendell Holmes declared this speech to be America's "Intellectual Declaration of Independence."


There are a few key points he makes that flesh out this vision:


Building on the growing attention he was receiving from the essay Nature, this speech solidified his popularity and weight in America, a level of reverence he would hold through out the rest of his life.






  View Live Article   This article is from Wikipedia. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License