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Thoreau Quiet Desperation Hard Work Has Always Essay

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Thoreau Quiet Desperation Hard Work has always been a virtue in American society, and some say it comes from the country's Puritan heritage. If so, it could explain a great deal about how hard work has become a form of self-imposed slavery. Puritan society was highly judgmental, and society's opinion of a person could become a form of slavery; if one attempts to always fulfill what others expect of them. Henry David Thoreau, in Walden, discussed the kind of self-imposed slavery that one can become a victim to when they fall into the trap that society has created.

When discussing slavery, Thoreau explores a more diverse definition of the word than simply a legal term, he discussed the nature of slavery and its impact upon a person's psyche. According to Thoreau, who wrote Walden while slavery was still legal in some places, feels that while what he called "Negro Slavery" was wrong,...

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But why would one choose to be in such a state? Thoreau seems to blame society, or public opinion, and asserts that when a person attempts to fill a role created by society, and spend all his time, effort and resources to do so, then one has entered into a life of quiet desperation. It is better to live one's life doing what they enjoy than to live a life where one does what others expect of them and never really achieve personal fulfillment.
The term "quiet desperation" has been said to refer to "free men's mental bondage to peer pressure and career recognition." (Cain 61) In other words, men freely choose to engage in the lives and careers that are expected of them by society. For instance, people choose careers based on the amount of…

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Cain, William. A Historical Guide To Henry David Thoreau. New York:

Oxford UP. 2000. Print.

Thoreau, Henry David. Walden. London: Bibliolis Books. 2010. Web. 26 Nov. 2012.

http://books.google.com/books?id=AwAbkjaAYsMC&printsec=frontcover&dq=
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