Elbert Hubbard, Transcendentalism and the Arts and Crafts Movement in America
Author: Clancy, Jonathan
Source: The Journal of Modern Craft, Volume 2, Number 2, July 2009 , pp. 143-160(18)
Publisher: Berg Publishers
Abstract:
This article examines the impact of Transcendentalism on the Arts and Crafts movement in America by exploring the manner in which Elbert Hubbard used this philosophy to help define his Roycroft community. Although scholars have focused on the movement's obvious indebtedness to William Morris, John Ruskin and other British sources, the writings of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau and Walt Whitman formed an equally important lens through which Americans viewed the Arts and Crafts movement. Not only did Americans look to these authors to help navigate the anxieties that accompanied the experience of modernity but many of the movement's figures like Hubbard, Gustav Stickley and Edward Pearson Pressey explicitly used Transcendentalism to shape their communities. In addition, many important authors and critics that came to define the movement—like Oscar Lovell Triggs, Horace Traubel and Sadakichi Hartmann—shared a personal connection with Transcendentalist thought.Keywords: ARTS AND CRAFTS; TRANSCENDENTALISM; ROYCROFT; ELBERT HUBBARD; RALPH WALDO EMERSON; HENRY DAVID THOREAU; WALT WHITMAN; OSCAR LOVELL TRIGGS
Document Type: Research article
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.2752/174967809X463088
Publication date: 2009-07-01
- Subscribe to this Title
- ingentaconnect is not responsible for the content or availability of external websites
- In this: publication
- By this: publisher
- In this Subject: Arts (General)
- By this author: Clancy, Jonathan

Shopping cart
Receive new issue alert
Get Permissions