The Pursuit of Power: Studies in the Vocabulary of PuritanismP. Lang, 1995 - 281 páginas Puritanism is defined as «a mode of rhetoric which had its inception as a reaction against Romanist and feudal hierarchies in England and then offered itself as a frame for a developing history of ideas in America.» The book analyzes the language of the major historical arguments for and against Puritanism and, in doing so, defines the negative as well as positive influences Puritanism has had on American culture. The arguments concerning Puritanism center around notions of power in the older faculty and Lockeian psychological theories. |
Índice
The Rhetoric of Puritanism | 3 |
The Origins of Puritanism | 9 |
The Tropology of Puritanism | 15 |
Direitos de autor | |
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The Goodly Word: The Puritan Influence in American Literature from Jonathan ... Ellwood Johnson Pré-visualização limitada - 2005 |
Palavras e frases frequentes
action Adams's Alexis de Tocqueville American Literature anarchism argued become behavior belief Boston Calvin Cambridge cause Chicago Christ Christian church civil conscience consciousness covenant culture dancing defined democracy described divine Edwards's election Emerson England English Puritanism Essays ethical evil experience faculty faculty psychology faith fiction God's grace Hawthorne Hawthorne's heart heaven Henry Adams human ideology imagination individual influence invisible Isaac Newton Jesus John Calvin John Locke John Milton Jonathan Edwards language liberty Locke's London matter means metonymic Milton mind moral motion mystical Nathaniel Hawthorne nature Newton person philosophy political predestined principle psychology Puritan Puritan theology reason relation religion Revolution Saints Scarlet Letter sensations sense sermon seventeenth century simple ideas social society soul Spirit Studies substance theology theory things Thomas Thomas Hooker Thoreau thought tion Tocqueville Tocqueville's Trans Transcendentalist understanding visible volition William James William Perkins women word York