Part 1: Lecture 1. Emerson, Thoreau, and Transcendentalism
Lecture 2. The roots of American Transcendentalism
Lecture 3. Emerson and the idea of America
Lecture 4. Emerson and Transcendentalism
Lecture 5. Emerson's influence
Lecture 7. Thoreau at Walden and beyond
Lecture 8. Thoreau's politics
Lecture 9. William Ellery Channing and Unitarianism
Lecture 10. Theodore Parker
social reform in the pulpit
Lecture 11. Amos Bronson Alcott
Lecture 12. Louisa May Alcott.
Part 2: Lecture 13. Margaret Fuller and rights for women
Lecture 14. Transcendental women
Lecture 15. Moncure Conway
southern transcendentalist
Lecture 16. Transcendental eccentrics
Lecture 17. Transcendental utopias
Lecture 18. Transcendentalism and education
Lecture 19. Thoreau, abolition, and John Brown
Lecture 20. Frederick Douglass
Lecture 21. Emily Dickinson
Lecture 23. Transcendentalism's 19th-century legacy
Lecture 24. The legacy in the 20th century and beyond.
Part 1: Lecture 1. Emerson, Thoreau, and Transcendentalism
Lecture 2. The roots of American Transcendentalism
Lecture 3. Emerson and the idea of America
Lecture 4. Emerson and Transcendentalism
Lecture 5. Emerson's influence
Lecture 7. Thoreau at Walden and beyond
Lecture 8. Thoreau's politics
Lecture 9. William Ellery Channing and Unitarianism
Lecture 10. Theodore Parker
social reform in the pulpit
Lecture 11. Amos Bronson Alcott
Lecture 12. Louisa May Alcott.
Part 2: Lecture 13. Margaret Fuller and rights for women
Lecture 14. Transcendental women
Lecture 15. Moncure Conway
southern transcendentalist
Lecture 16. Transcendental eccentrics
Lecture 17. Transcendental utopias
Lecture 18. Transcendentalism and education
Lecture 19. Thoreau, abolition, and John Brown
Lecture 20. Frederick Douglass
Lecture 21. Emily Dickinson
Lecture 23. Transcendentalism's 19th-century legacy
Lecture 24. The legacy in the 20th century and beyond.