AUDIOBOOK

Walden and On the Duty of Civil Disobedience

Henry David Thoreau
(0)
Duration
13h 51m
Year
2009
Language
English

About

In the early spring of 1845, Henry David Thoreau built and lived in a cabin near the shore of Walden Pond in rural Massachusetts. For the next two years, he enacted his own Transcendentalist experiment, living a simple life based on self-reliance, individualism, and harmony with nature. The journal he kept at that time evolved into his masterwork, Walden, an eloquent expression of a uniquely American philosophy. During the same period, Thoreau endured a one-day imprisonment for his refusal to pay a poll tax, an act of protest against the government for supporting the Mexican War, to which he was morally opposed. In his essay, “On the Duty of Civil Disobedience,” Thoreau defends the principles of such nonviolent protest, setting an example that has influenced such figures as Gandhi and Martin Luther King, Jr., and endures to this day.

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Reviews

"[Thoreau's] ideas influenced me greatly…I actually took the name of my movement from Thoreau's essay 'On the Duty of Civil Disobedience'…"
Mahatma Gandhi
"Here, in ['On the Duty of Civil Disobedience'] I made my first contact with the theory of nonviolent resistance…I was so deeply moved that I reread the work several times…No other person has been more eloquent and passionate in getting this idea across than Henry David Thoreau."
Martin Luther King, Jr.
"Walden is a major philosophical statement on the American character, the uses of a life of simple toil, and the values of rugged independence…a work that today…is as readable and perhaps even more timely than when it was written."
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