

If you believe you should have access to that content, please contact your librarian.įor librarians and administrators, your personal account also provides access to institutional account management. The institutional subscription may not cover the content that you are trying to access. Oxford Academic is home to a wide variety of products.


Select your institution from the list provided, which will take you to your institution's website to sign in.Click Sign in through your institution.Shibboleth / Open Athens technology is used to provide single sign-on between your institution’s website and Oxford Academic. This authentication occurs automatically, and it is not possible to sign out of an IP authenticated account.Ĭhoose this option to get remote access when outside your institution. Typically, access is provided across an institutional network to a range of IP addresses. If you are a member of an institution with an active account, you may be able to access content in one of the following ways: Get help with access Institutional accessĪccess to content on Oxford Academic is often provided through institutional subscriptions and purchases. And as Cold War anxiety coalesced with his own sense that the study of America had been co-opted by an imperial project that in turn led to intellectual constriction and repression, he found himself describing with increasing frequency the Emersonian scholar as a “lone wolf”, an outsider fiercely protective of independent thought while at the same time fated to obscurity, misappropriation, and bitter alienation. In 1939-40, for instance, as the Harvard campus erupted in a bitterly politicized debate over US intervention in World War II, Miller wrote “From Edwards to Emerson”, a dazzling piece of scholarly synthesis that covertly rebuked campus communists and isolationists while at the same time suggesting the basis for more effective intellectual activism. Accordingly, some of his most important utterances about American culture gather around Emerson and seek to establish a “usable” version of the author as someone who wished above all else to make ideas a force in a world hopelessly immured in an inert materialism. This chapter traces the process by which Perry Miller came to view Emerson as the molten center in the Ptolemaic universe of American literary history.
