Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 272
Trim: 6½ x 9
978-0-7425-2144-5 • Hardback • April 2002 • $142.00 • (£109.00)
978-0-7425-2145-2 • Paperback • April 2002 • $52.00 • (£40.00)
978-0-7425-7808-1 • eBook • April 2002 • $49.00 • (£38.00)
George Kateb is William Nelson Cromwell Professor of Politics at Princeton University.
Chapter 1 Self-Reliance and the Life of the Mind
Chapter 2 Redeeming the Frustrations of Experience
Chapter 3 The Question of Religiousness
Chapter 4 Friendship and Love
Chapter 5 Individuality and Identity
Chapter 6 Self-Reliance, Politics, and Society
In this original treatment, which offers new insightson one of Emerson's central ideas as well as on his political theory,Kateb portrays an Emerson who is indispensable for thinking about America, as important as Jefferson and Lincoln.
— Eric Wilson; ESQ: A Journal of the American Renaissance
There is no recent study that so convincingly shows that Emerson anticipates (and rivals) Nietzsche as a sustained practitioner of multiple perspectivism and that Emersonian self-reliance is therefore 'not one particular substantive or doctrinal principle like other ones.' In this and other ways, Kateb has deepened, and usefully complicated, our understanding of Emerson.
— Richard F. Teichgraber III; American Literature
By emphasizing mental self-reliance Kateb reasserts Emerson the Transcendentalist and makes a compelling case for the political importance of this dimension of Emerson's thought. . . . For [Kateb] Emerson's construction of self-reliance serves as a vital, but problematic, model that political philosophers can situate as both the foundation and the consummation of a theory of democratic civil society.
— T. Gregory Garver; College English
Emerson, in George Kateb's engagingly lucid and compelling account, is the American Shakespeare. Kateb justifies this bold claim by demonstrating the poetic amplitude, incisiveness, impersonality, and authority of Emerson's thought. With Emerson, to be sure, the dramatist's characters are replaced by ideas, and one idea—'self-reliance'—dominates all the rest. The chief imperative for citizens of a democracy, according to Kateb's Emerson, is a steady effort to think one's own thoughts and to think them through. This radical principle defines the philosophy of democratic individuality, a distinctively modern creed whose founding genius—Kateb persuasively reveals—was Ralph Waldo Emerson.
— Leo Marx, William R. Kenan, Jr. Professor Emeritus of American Cultural History, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
An important contribution. . . . Kateb] has an excellent discussion of how antagonism and contrast lie at the heart of Emerson's notion of identity.
— Sharon Cameron; Critical Inquiry