Prodigals and Pilgrims: The American Revolution Against Patriarchal Authority 1750-1800Cambridge University Press, 1982 - 328 Seiten The author traces a constellation of intimately related ideas - about the nature of parental authority and filial rights, of moral obligation of Scripture, of the growth of the mind and the nature of historical progress - from their most important English and continental expressions in a variety of literary and theological texts, to their transmission, reception and application in Revolutionary America and in the early national period of American culture. |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-5 von 80
Seite
... mind 197 202 208 214 221 227 227 230 235 From political to moral independence : the triumph of neutrality 248 The new family as the New World 259 Notes 269 Index 316 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS I have incurred many debts in writing this book vi ...
... mind 197 202 208 214 221 227 227 230 235 From political to moral independence : the triumph of neutrality 248 The new family as the New World 259 Notes 269 Index 316 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS I have incurred many debts in writing this book vi ...
Seite 2
... mind as a tabula rasa . Locke argued that a child's character is not inherited at birth but rather is " created " by the sum total of sense impressions and experiences written on the blank slate of his mind . Thus no longer was the ...
... mind as a tabula rasa . Locke argued that a child's character is not inherited at birth but rather is " created " by the sum total of sense impressions and experiences written on the blank slate of his mind . Thus no longer was the ...
Seite 3
... mind and the consequent emphasis on nurture was what Lawrence Stone has recently described as the " growth of ... mind by being given an education that encourages an independence of mind ; for as Kant concludes , " Man can only become ...
... mind and the consequent emphasis on nurture was what Lawrence Stone has recently described as the " growth of ... mind by being given an education that encourages an independence of mind ; for as Kant concludes , " Man can only become ...
Seite 5
... mind and the nature of historical progress . The book traces these ideas from their most important English and continental expressions in a variety of literary and pedagogical texts to their transmission , reception , and ap- plication ...
... mind and the nature of historical progress . The book traces these ideas from their most important English and continental expressions in a variety of literary and pedagogical texts to their transmission , reception , and ap- plication ...
Seite 12
Der Inhalt dieser Seite ist beschränkt..
Der Inhalt dieser Seite ist beschränkt..
Inhalt
EDUCATIONAL THEORY AND MORAL INDEPENDENCE | 9 |
THE LOCKEAN PARADIGM IN THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY | 12 |
ROUSSEAU AND THE NEW AUTHORITY | 29 |
THE TRANSMISSION OF IDEOLOGY AND THE BESTSELLERS OF 1775 | 36 |
THE NEW PATERNITY AND THE BESTSELLERS OF 1775 | 38 |
THE PEDAGOGUES | 40 |
THE MORALISTS | 51 |
THE FAMILIAL POLITICS OF THE FORTUNATE FALL | 67 |
LIBERTY AND SONSHIP | 174 |
THE NECESSITY OF REBIRTH | 183 |
THE TRIUMPH OF NURTURE | 188 |
THE CHARACTER OF THE NATIONAL FAMILY | 195 |
GEORGE WASHINGTON AND THE RECONSTITUTED FAMILY | 197 |
THE POWER OF EXAMPLE | 202 |
THE CHARACTER OF THE FATHER | 208 |
THE DEBT OF HONOR AND THE GREATER GOOD | 214 |
CLARISSA IN AMERICA | 83 |
FORMS OF FILIAL FREEDOM | 93 |
FRANKLIN AND THE NEW ORDER OF THE AGES | 106 |
PRODIGALS AND PARENTAL TYRANTS | 113 |
AFFECTIONATE UNIONS AND THE NEW VOLUNTARISM | 123 |
FROM PASSIVE TO ACTIVE DISOBEDIENCE | 144 |
FILIAL FREEDOM AND AMERICAN PROTESTANTISM | 155 |
THE ASSAULT ON JEHOVAH | 156 |
HUMAN ACCOUNTABILITY AND THE MORAL CHARACTER OF GOD | 164 |
DISSENT AND CONFIDENCE | 221 |
THE SEALING OF THE GARDEN OR THE WORLD WELL LOST | 227 |
THE HARDENING OF THE HEART | 230 |
VENTRILOQUISTS COUNTERFEITERS AND THE SEDUCTION OF THE MIND | 235 |
THE TRIUMPH OF NEUTRALITY | 248 |
THE NEW FAMILY AS THE NEW WORLD | 259 |
NOTES | 269 |
316 | |
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Adam affection American Revolution antipatriarchal appeared argued Arminian authority become Belisarius benevolence Boston British Cato's Letters century character Chesterfield child Christ Christian Christopher Hill Clarissa colonies corruption Crusoe daughter death declared Defoe Defoe's disobedience divine doctrine eighteenth eighteenth-century embrace England England Primer English example faith father Federalist fiction fortunate fall Franklin freedom God's grace gratitude happiness heart heaven heroine human ideal ideology independence insistence Jefferson Jehovah John John Adams Jonathan Boucher letter liberty Locke Locke's Lockean Marmontel marriage mind moral mother narrative nation nature novel nurture obliged once one's Paine Paine's parental tyranny paternal pedagogy Philadelphia political popular postmillennial Power of Sympathy prodigal Protestant Protestantism Puritan quoted rationalist reason republican Revolutionary Richardson Robinson Crusoe Rousseau scriptural sense sentimental sermon society spirit suggests Telemachus Testament theme Thomas Paine tion ultimately University Press virtue vols Washington Watts's York young