…"Bright Circle" brings together five women associated with Transcendentalism — a school of thought that arose in mid-19th-century Massachusetts guided by some key tenets: a desire to connect with God through an intense encounter with the natural world; a commitment to the individual spirit; a resistance to conformity; and a sense that all people possessed the capacity to experience divine inspiration, if they nurtured the imagination to perceive it. Some of these women were related, by blood or marriage; they read one another's writings and sensed affinities, both in their thinking and in their subordinate societal position...
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/01/23/books/review/randall-fuller-bright-circle.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare
Phil.Oliver@mtsu.edu
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I think this goes along well with an excellent point made by Jessica Law in a previous post for Questions 1/27. Oftentimes, the efforts of women and other marginalized groups are overlooked or even erased from our history. We will be forever ignorant of so many ideas and perspectives their great minds had to offer. It is nice to see the contributions of these women recognized in depth and how they challenged conformity.
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