49 pages • 1 hour read
Transcendentalism is a philosophical movement promoting individualism and personal freedom that emerged in the early 1800s in New England. Many of its prominent thinkers, such as Henry David Thoreau and Ralph Waldo Emerson, were educators who created a transcendental model of education focused on the growth of self-consciousness. Both Emerson and Thoreau believed “education should be geared to developing the whole person and cultivating curiosity, character, and self-confidence" (Andrews, Barry. “Review: Transcendental Learning: A Review.” The Thoreau Society Bulletin, no. 278, pp. 1-3). In the novel, the Bhaers run Plumfield on this principle of differentiated education, offering each boy encouragement and guidance in his unique talent or interest.
This holistic approach also had a spiritual dimension. In a transcendental education, the individual possesses divinity and a moral conscience that will emerge naturally as they grow in self-knowledge. In the novel, Mrs. Jo’s teaching philosophy is to love each boy and find “the soft spot in his heart” (28) to help him connect with his goodness. Play and imaginative dramas are also encouraged at Plumfield as a tool for learning morals and manners. Alcott’s own father Amos Bronson, another leading figure in the transcendentalist movement, promoted similar activities as a part of a child’s development of consciousness.
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By Louisa May Alcott
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