Transparent Eyeballs: The Transcendentalists and Their Worlds, 1803-Present

Course | Available (Membership Required)

Members only
1/14/2025-2/18/2025
1:00 PM-2:30 PM EST on Tue
$75.00

Transparent Eyeballs: The Transcendentalists and Their Worlds, 1803-Present

Course | Available (Membership Required)

Transcendentalism is an umbrella term that refers to a complex and profoundly influential philosophical, spiritual, and literary movement that emerged in the 1820s and 1830s. The intellectual, social, and political ideas generated by Transcendentalist thinkers, writers, and activists transformed Americans’ understandings of nature, God, and the rights and responsibilities of the individual to themselves and to society in ways that continue to reverberate across US politics and culture in our own times. This course will examine the ideas, writings, political activism, and legacies of contributors to the Transcendentalist movement including Ralph Waldo Emerson, Margaret Fuller, Henry David Thoreau, Walt Whitman, Herman Melville, and beyond. Our investigations will aim to help each of us actualize Emerson’s definition of freedom as “an open-ended process of self-realization by which individuals [can] remake themselves and their own lives." Your instructor: Anthony Antonucci, PhD A New England native (and self-described “New England Transcendentalist”), Dr. Anthony Antonucci teaches history and American studies at Cal State Pomona. His passion for Transcendentalism is rooted in his experience as an avid hiker, mountain climber, vagabond traveler, and lover of wild nature and poetry. He earned multiple graduate degrees in US history and culture including a PhD in US History from the University of Connecticut under the direction of Bancroft Award-winning-historian, Dr. Robert Gross. Antonucci’s work as a scholar of US social and transnational history has earned numerous awards, including a Fulbright Research Fellowship (Italy), and fellowships through the Massachusetts Historical Society, the American Antiquarian Society, and the National Endowment for the Humanities.

  • This course is offered by the National Resource Center (NRC) for Osher Institutes. After registration is complete, the NRC will facilitate the rest, including hosting each course on Zoom, sending emails to participants with registration details, Zoom links, etc. Registered participants are encouraged to attend the online "Osher Online Member Orientation".