Reveries Of The Solitary Walker — Jean Jacques Rousseau

Reveries Of The Solitary Walker
Jean Jacques RousseauOxford University Press - Classics
Reveries Of The Solitary Walker
Jean Jacques RousseauReveries of the Solitary Walker is Rousseau s last great work the product of his final years of exile from the society that condemned his political and religious views Returning to Paris the philosopher determines to keep a faithful record of the thoughts and ideas that come to him on his perambulations Part reminiscence part reflection enlivened by anecdote and encounters the Reveries form a kind of sequel to his Confessions but they are more introspective and less defensive Rousseau finds happiness in solitude walks in nature botanizing and meditation Writing an account of his walks becomes a means of achieving self knowledge and safeguarding for himself the pleasure that others he is convinced seek to deny him The Reveries shaped by the unmediated nature of Rousseau s thought processes give powerfully lyrical expression to a painfully tortured soul in search of peace This new translation is accompanied by an introduction and notes that explore the nature of the work and its historical literary and intellectual contexts

Oxford University Press - Classics
Reveries of the Solitary Walker is Rousseaus last great work the product of his final years of exile from the society that condemned his political and religious views Returning to Paris the philosopher determines to keep a faithful record of the thoughts and ideas that come to him on his perambulations Part reminiscence part reflection enlivened by anecdote and encounters the Reveries form a kind of sequel to his Confessions but they are more introspective and less defensive Rousseau finds happiness in solitude walks in nature botanizing and meditation Writing an account of his walks becomes a means of achieving self knowledge and safeguarding for himself the pleasure that others he is convinced seek to deny him The Reveries shaped by the unmediated nature of Rousseaus thought processes give powerfully lyrical expression to a painfully tortured soul in search of peace This new translation is accompanied by an introduction and notes that explore the nature of the work and its historical literary and intellectual contexts

Oxford University Press - Classics
Reveries of the Solitary Walker is Rousseau s last great work the product of his final years of exile from the society that condemned his political and religious views Returning to Paris the philosopher determines to keep a faithful record of the thoughts and ideas that come to him on his perambulations Part reminiscence part reflection enlivened by anecdote and encounters the Reveries form a kind of sequel to his Confessions but they are more introspective and less defensive Rousseau finds happiness in solitude walks in nature botanizing and meditation Writing an account of his walks becomes a means of achieving self knowledge and safeguarding for himself the pleasure that others he is convinced seek to deny him The Reveries shaped by the unmediated nature of Rousseau s thought processes give powerfully lyrical expression to a painfully tortured soul in search of peace This new translation is accompanied by an introduction and notes that explore the nature of the work and its historical literary and intellectual contexts