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Writing Nature

Henry Thoreau’s Journal

At his death, Henry Thoreau left the majority of his writing unpublished. The bulk of this material is a journal that he kept for twenty-four years. Sharon Cameron’s major claim is that this private work (the Journal) was Thoreau’s primary work, taking precedence over the books that he published in his lifetime. Her controversial thesis views Thoreau’s Journal as a composition that confounds the distinction between public and private—the basis on which our conventional treatment of discourse depends.

181 pages | 5.25 x 8.00 | © 1989

Literature and Literary Criticism: American and Canadian Literature

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Textual Note
1. The Journal Against Walden: A Preliminary Perspective
2. The Language of the Journal
3. Natural Relations
4. Speaker and Audience
5. Writing Nature
Notes
Index

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