1.) Does Walden appeal to our "sense
of rebelliousness and individualism"? Are we "inspired by his idealistic actions
and principled and good-humored erudition"? Do we enjoy thinking about how we
might take a more "Thoreauvian approach" to our own lives?
2.) How do modern conveniences and gadgets
influence our culture? After reading Thoreau, are we now eager to give them up?
3.) Can we consider how doing and thinking
for ourselves is made possible (or impeded) by modern educational and cultural
institutions?
4.) To which "genre" (or genres) does
Walden belong?
5.) What is Thoreau's relationship to his
audience and to society as a whole? How does he situate his narrative persona?
That is, what kind of person is the "I" in the text, and how do we know?
6.) How can Walden be considered as an
application of Transcendental philosophy?
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