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History of American Literature

History of American Literature. No written tradition. History, legends, and myths were passed on by Oral Tradition. Native American Experience. Guess what happened…. To Native American stories and traditional lore?. You guessed it….

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History of American Literature

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  1. History of American Literature

  2. No written tradition. History, legends, and myths were passed on by Oral Tradition. Native American Experience

  3. Guess what happened… To Native American stories and traditional lore?

  4. You guessed it… Much of the history and tradition was lost when the Europeans came. Christopher Columbus, John Smith, William Bradford and others are some of the earliest voices in what we come to know as American Literature.

  5. Pilgrim Fathers: settling in 1600’s After the explorers, another kind of American founding narrative. The Bible, especially Genesis and Exodus, shape the Puritan’s vision of the New World.

  6. Puritan Tradition • Daily struggle with sin • Bible would help them through torments of human weakness. • A plain, straightforward style of writing was highly prized.

  7. The Crucible was set in the Puritan era and Arthur Miller – in addition to commenting on McCarthyism – also used the play to criticize parts of our Puritan heritage. The Crucible

  8. Nathaniel Hawthorne used this short story to criticize the rigid, unforgiving religion he associated with his Puritan ancestors. “Man of Adamant”

  9. Remember Edward’s scary sermon?

  10. Jonathan Edwards “Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God” Edwards wanted to make Puritanism vibrant for the 18th century and to re-establish its main doctrines on sound philosophical basis. Emotional power of his sermons helped spark the Great Awakening (late 1730’s)

  11. Revolutionary Years Discourse before the 1776 Revolution called forth the language of politics rooted in ancient Greek and Roman states.

  12. Americans again ask themselves: This is a second birth for Americans, as they wonder… What is the meaning of the country we are forming in America?

  13. “The Declaration of Independence”: Major act of brain power! Faith in the power of pubic speech to govern sensible men of good will. Thomas Jefferson

  14. Thomas Paine • “Common Sense” 1776 – gives reasons for separation from Britain. • “The American Crisis” 1776-1783. Series of 16 pamphlets which spoke directly to current military situation.

  15. Romanticism: Europe late 18th c.

  16. Romanticism in Europe From Europe came Romanticism, a literary movement that emphasized: • heightened interest in nature • emphasis on the individual's expression of emotion and imagination • departure from the attitudes and forms of classicism • rebellion against established social rules and conventions.

  17. American Naissance/ Transcendentalism America begins to come to maturity in art and culture with the fabulous five: Emerson, Thoreau, Hawthorne, Melville and Whitman.

  18. Ralph Waldo Emerson • His book Nature published in 1836 is seen as the start of Transcendentalism and a uniquely American literary style

  19. Changing view of Nature • The Puritans saw nature as wicked and threatening, a place where the devil might live. • For Transcendentalists, nature was not a force to be dominated, but something to speak to one’s soul.

  20. Thoreau--Walden or Life in the Woods During Thoreau’s stay at Walden Pond, his observations of nature and his thoughts, become an important Transcendentalist text.

  21. American Gothic-- Dark Transcendentalists Edgar Allen Poe, Hawthorne and Melville are also influenced by Romanticism and Transcendentalism, but they have a darker outlook on life.

  22. Remember “The Black Cat”? Poe’s imagination is decadent with no suggestion of God or a moral world. Edgar Allen Poe

  23. Poe and Hawthorne used gothic elements such as grotesque characters, bizarre situations and violent events in their fiction. American Gothic

  24. Literature of the Civil War Personal experience was central in the literature of the time. • Slave narratives • Diaries and letters of the war

  25. Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, 1845, powerful and deeply felt reversal of the conventional images of slave existence and sensibility. Abolitionist Voices

  26. Civil War and aftermath 1855-1870 • Novelists such as Twain had little direct participation in the war. • The upheaval forced language to new Realism. • Old eloquence = New plain speaking

  27. Regionalism/Realism Regionalism: escape from East Coast domination. Sentimentalized American past that was fading. Gave voice to new aspects of American life: immigrants, Blacks, experiences of women.

  28. Mark Twain Gift of humor and moral skepticism in Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1885).

  29. Naturalism 1870-1910 • Old standards of genteel morality have no place. • Our world is determined by man’s biology, evolutionary process, and the impersonal machine-like operations of society.

  30. Jack London: “To Build a Fire” This story of brutal survival is an example of naturalism.

  31. Following WWI, some Americans just wanted to have a good time. The Roaring Twenties embodied new freedoms, new fashion and attitudes. The Great Gatsby shows this era. The Jazz Age—1920’s

  32. Harlem Renaissance Flourishing in 1920’s

  33. Great Migration—Harlem Renaissance Millions of black farmers and sharecropprs moved to the urban North in search of economic and social freedom. Harlem in New York City became a cultural center of African-American life.

  34. Langston Hughes Zora Neale Hurston African-American Literary Movement

  35. Modernism: 1910-1940’s Literature’s response to the rapidly changing industrialized world. If you had lived from1860 to 1940, you would have seen a whole new world developed.

  36. Features of Modernism Modernists: • Rejected traditional subject matter and themes. • Instead of heroes, often focused on alienated individuals • Emotions replaced with understatement and irony.

  37. Ernest Hemingway Ernest Hemingway is considered a modernist writer. Perhaps you read The Old Man and the Sea?

  38. Contemporary Literature 1940 to present Concerns include: • Focus on equal rights • Question on what makes an American in an increasingly diverse culture • What is the American Dream

  39. Lorraine Hansberry’s play is an example of both the importance of drama and the focus on civil rights. A Raisin in the Sun

  40. I Can’t Believe that it’s finally over! Here’s a really nice present for listening…

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