Louisa May Alcott and Ralph Waldo Emerson

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Louisa May Alcott and Ralph Waldo Emerson were similar in many ways. They both grew up in poor households during the eighteenth century and were widely published and well-known writers as well as transcendentalists. However, Emerson never had to use a pen name like Alcott’s “A. M. Barnard” in order to be respected, and he was able to attend Harvard College to further his education. His writing would always be regarded more highly than that of Alcott, simply because at that time women were meant to stay at home and supposedly had no need for extended knowledge, advanced thinking, or personal opinions. Alcott defied this widely popular view, however, and followed more closely in her father’s footsteps than in those of her mother’s regarding political and religious views, along with sharing his writing gene. Although Alcott and Emerson shared similar ideas and this talent for writing, they did not share the same gender and because of this lone fact they were not both able to express all of their ideas in the same way or through the same facets. Therefore, the rhetoric that each of these writers employed in their writing was slightly different.
Alcott grew up in a poor family with three sisters. Early on in her life, she was forced to work as a teacher, nanny, seamstress, and at other odd jobs in order to help support her family. Her education came mainly from her father, Bronson Alcott, who was a teacher, philosopher, and vegan. From him Alcott obtained her transcendentalist beliefs and gained many of her ideas, techniques, and most likely her power of rhetoric. She possessed an independent spirit and was sometimes rebellious against the standards of society and the restrictions that they put on her as a woman.
Alcott is sometime...

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...e useful, to be honorable, to be compassionate, to have it make some difference that you have lived and lived well.” Alcott -- “Happy is the son whose faith in his mother remains unchallenged.”

Works Cited
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