id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_mgzuw2ydebamdcay2ymld453xe William J. Harris Emancipating Pragmatism: Emerson, Jazz, and Experimental Writing (review) 2006.0 5 .pdf application/pdf 1736 112 61 Emancipating Pragmatism: Emerson, Jazz, and Experimental Writing (review) Following the pragmatist John Dewey, Magee sees literary criticism as "a form of desire, of effort as action" (1) instead of seeing it more that Emerson's ideas about language will be employed by a variety of American language: "In order to deauthorize his texts," Magee states, "Emerson needed to Magee feels that Emerson employs language in the way For our purposes, Magee's discussion of the Emerson American vernacular is Magee suggests that Emerson does seem true is that Emerson does see that the American language embodies Emerson wanted the American language to be Following Emerson, Ellison's idea of the American language is Magee reads O'Hara as a pragmatist, but pragmatism everywhere, he misreads Baraka's "Three Modes of History and Culture" by thinking the poem refers to John Dewey instead of Thomas Dewey, the through the New American Poetry, has been influenced by pragmatism. Magee is an American Scholar, a "Man Thinking." ./cache/work_mgzuw2ydebamdcay2ymld453xe.pdf ./txt/work_mgzuw2ydebamdcay2ymld453xe.txt