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  1. By Henry David Thoreau. The historical context of Henry David Thoreau’s ‘Walden’ connects to the start of the New England transcendentalism movement - touching back to as far as the American Revolution and the cultural zeitgeist of such eras. Article written by Victor Onuorah.

  2. Plot. Walden Dean is an unassuming 3rd generation court stenographer in a small southern town. When he discovers he is dying, he decides to exact revenge on criminals who escaped their prosecution, while at the same time trying to understand why the disappearance of several young boys has so far gone undetected.

  3. Dec 17, 2023 · After the robbery incident, Walden went on to kill two people: Colt, the man who murdered his own daughter, and Nurse Mills, who was accused of torturing her patients. Both had gotten off, and Walden questioned his God about how they could roam free. Now the question is clear: was this ‘new’ Walden, who attacked the robber and killed two ...

    • Ayush Awasthi
  4. Walden Dean (Emile Hirsch) is a stenographer in a small southern town, whose mind has witnessed all types of injustices in the courtroom. After discovering he has a terminal illness, the repressed anger deep within him surfaces - taking justice into his own hands in the most gruesome ways imaginable. Thriller.

    • (4)
    • David Keith
    • Mick Davis
  5. See in text (Economy) In Walden, Thoreau builds on the philosophy of transcendentalism that was most famously described in Ralph Waldo Emerson's essay "Self-Reliance." In that essay, Emerson established a set of ideals for living that combined abstract philosophy with practical advice. Walden builds on these ideas.

  6. Nov 10, 2023 · Walden Dean is a stenographer, whose mind witnessed all types of injustices in the courtroom. After discovering he has a terminal illness, repressed anger deep within him surfaces -- taking ...

    • Mystery & Thriller, Horror
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  8. Historical Context of Walden The Transcendentalist movement had its roots in Unitarianism, a major Christian denomination in New England in the late eighteenth century that broke with Calvinism by abandoning the notion of inherent human depravity and placing value on the intellect as the path to spiritual wisdom.

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