Video games The
National Endowment for the Arts in 2012 bestowed
Tracy Fullerton, game designer and professor at the
University of Southern California's
Game Innovation Lab, with a $40,000 grant to create, based on the book, a first person, open world video game called
Walden, a game, in which players "inhabit an open, three-dimensional game world that will simulate the geography and environment of Walden Woods". The game production was also supported by grants from the
National Endowment for the Humanities and was part of the Sundance New Frontier Story Lab in 2014. The game was released to critical acclaim on July 4, 2017, celebrating both the day that Thoreau went down to the pond to begin his experiment and the 200th anniversary of Thoreau's birth. It was nominated for the Off-Broadway Award for Best Indie Game at the New York Game Awards 2018.
Digitization and scholarship efforts Digital Thoreau, a collaboration among the
State University of New York at Geneseo, the
Thoreau Society, and the
Walden Woods Project, has developed a fluid text edition of
Walden across the different versions of the work to help readers trace the evolution of Thoreau's classic work across seven stages of revision from 1846 to 1854. Within any chapter of
Walden, readers can compare up to seven manuscript versions with each other, with the Princeton University Press edition, and consult critical notes drawn from Thoreau scholars, including Ronald Clapper's dissertation
The Development of Walden: A Genetic Text (1967) and Walter Harding's
Walden: An Annotated Edition (1995). Ultimately, the project will provide a space for readers to discuss Thoreau in the margins of his texts.
Influence • The Dutch writer and psychiatrist
Frederik van Eeden used the ideas from this book to create his own vision, back to the nature, at the commune Walden in the
Netherlands in 1898. • In the 1948 book
Walden Two by behavioral psychologist
B. F. Skinner the experimental Walden Two Community is mentioned as having the benefits of living in a place like Thoreau's Walden, but "with company". •
Jonas Mekas' 1968 film
Walden is loosely inspired by the book. • The film
All That Heaven Allows (1955) is clearly influenced by Thoreau, with the protagonist Cary Scott (
Jane Wyman) reading lines from Walden. •
Jean Craighead George's
My Side of the Mountain trilogy (1959) draws heavily from themes expressed in
Walden. Protagonist Sam Gribley is nicknamed "Thoreau" by an English teacher he befriends. •
Shane Carruth's second film
Upstream Color (2013) features
Walden as a central item of its story, and draws heavily on the themes expressed by Thoreau. • In 1962,
William Melvin Kelley titled his first novel,
A Different Drummer, after a famous quote from
Walden: "If a man does not keep pace with his companions, perhaps it is because he hears a different drummer." The quote, as well as another stanza from the book, appears as an epigraph in Kelley's novel, which echoes Thoreau's theme of individualism. • The name of the gay men's culture and news magazine
Drum, which began publication in 1964, was inspired by the same quote, which appeared in every edition. • The 1989 film
Dead Poets Society heavily features an excerpt from
Walden as a motif in the plot. • The Finnish symphonic metal band
Nightwish paraphrased the quote "Rather than love, than money, than fame, give me truth" on their 2011 song "
The Crow, the Owl and the Dove" from the studio album
Imaginaerum. They also make several references to
Walden on their eighth studio album
Endless Forms Most Beautiful of 2015, including in the song titled "My Walden" and in the song "Alpenglow". • The investment research firm
Morningstar, Inc. was named for the last sentence in
Walden by founder and CEO
Joe Mansueto, and the "O" in the company's logo is shaped like a rising sun. • In the 2015 video game
Fallout 4, which takes place in Massachusetts, there exists a location called Walden Pond, where the player can listen to an automated tourist guide detail Thoreau's experience living in the wilderness. At the location there stands a small house which is said to be the same house Thoreau built and stayed in. •
Phoebe Bridgers references the book in her song "Smoke Signals". • In 2018, MC Lars and Mega Ran released a song called "Walden" where they discuss the book and its influence. • In the 1997 episode "
Weight Gain 4000" of
South Park,
Eric Cartman "writes" a prize-winning essay copied from
Walden, replacing Thoreau's name with his own. • Professor
Richard Primack from
Boston University utilizes information from Thoreau's
Walden in
climate change research. • It is suggested that the genre of
nature writing in
American literature is derived from Thoreau's
Walden. • Austin Chinn, editor of the trilogy version of
Ring of Bright Water by
Gavin Maxwell, suggests that Maxwell may have been influenced by Walden when writing the best-seller. == References ==