America's Bachelor Uncle
Thoreau and the American Polity
Bob Pepperman Taylor
192 pages, 6 x 9
American Political Thought
Cloth ISBN 978-0-7006-0806-5, $25.00
Emphatically revisionist, this
book reveals a Thoreau most people never knew existed. Contrary
to conventional views, Bob Pepperman Taylor argues that Thoreau
was one of America's most powerful and least understood political
thinkers, a man who promoted community and democratic values
while being ever vigilant against the evils of excessive or illegitimate
authority.
Still widely perceived as a remarkable nature writer but simplistic
philosopher with no real understanding of human society, Thoreau
is resurrected here as a profound social critic with more on
his mind than utopian daydreams. Rather than the aloof and private
individualist spurned by conservatives and championed by radicals
and environmentalists, Taylor portrays Thoreau as a genuinely
engaged political theorist concerned with the moral foundations
of public life. Like a solicitous "bachelor uncle"
(an allusion to his journals), Thoreau persistently prodded his
fellow citizens to remember that they were responsible for independently
evaluating the behavior of their government and political community.
Taylor contends that, far from being confined to a few political
essays ("Civil Disobedience," "Slavery in Massachusetts,"
and "A Plea for Captain John Brown"), Thoreau's political
critique was a lifetime project that informed virtually all of
his work. Taylor's persuasive study should send readers back
to Walden, A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers,
and the 14-volume Journal, among many other writings,
for a provocative new look at one of America's most influential
writers.
"At last, an account that takes Thoreau seriously as
a political thinker and makes an unconventional but persuasive
case that Thoreau was deeply concerned with our political community:
its citizens, its values and institutions, and its future. This
is a fascinating book that is easy to recommend."--Robert
Booth Fowler, author of The Dance with Community: The
Contemporary Debate in American Political Thought
"This lucid and engaging reinterpretation of Thoreau's
political thought is at once bold and nuanced. The book gives
us a fresh appreciation for Thoreau's importance as a political
theorist and critic without ignoring or slighting Thoreau's troubling
limitations."--Richard Ellis, author of Presidential
Lightning Rods: The Politics of Blame Avoidance
BOB PEPPERMAN TAYLOR is associate professor of political
science at the University of Vermont and the author of Our Limits Transgressed: Environmental Political
Thought in America.
|