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Margaret Fuller: Summer on the Lakes, in 1843 (EBook, 1844, C.C. Little and J. Brown, C.S. Francis and Co.)

[electronic resource] /, 256 pages

English language

Published 1844 by C.C. Little and J. Brown, C.S. Francis and Co..

OCLC Number:
1011906103

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Sarah Margaret Fuller Ossoli (1810-1850), better known as Margaret Fuller, was a writer, editor, translator, early feminist thinker, critic, and social reformer who was associated with the Transcendentalist movement in New England. This is her introspective account of a trip to the Great Lakes region in 1843. Organized as a series of travel episodes interspersed with literary and social commentary, the work displays a style common to the portfolios, sketch books, and commonplace books kept by educated nineteenth-century women. In addition to her own thoughts about natural landscapes and human encounters, Fuller includes stories, legends, allegorical dialogues, poems, and excerpts from the works of other authors. When she traveled to the Midwest, Fuller was exhausted by her work as editor of the Dial, the Transcendentalist journal she edited with Ralph Waldo Emerson. Accompanied during part of the journey by her friends James Clarke and Sarah Clarke, who created the book’s …

3 editions

Subjects

  • Description and travel

Places

  • Great Lakes (North America)
  • Old Northwest