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Unit 2. A Growing Nation American Renaissance 1800-1870. 1870. Industrialism, population growth, economic changes, and the Civil War had aged a youthful nation’s spirit, but also gave way to great American writers like Irving, Poe, Emerson, Thoreau, Dickinson, and Whitman.
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Unit 2 A Growing Nation American Renaissance 1800-1870
1870 • Industrialism, population growth, economic changes, and the Civil War had aged a youthful nation’s spirit, but also gave way to great American writers like Irving, Poe, Emerson, Thoreau, Dickinson, and Whitman
19th Century American inventions • 1807 – Steamboat • 1814 – Iron-tipped plow • 1835 – Sewing Machine • 1845 – Porcelain false teeth • 1857 – Passenger elevator • 1863 – Roller skates • 1863 - Typewriter
The American Renaissance • The European Renaissance was the rebirth of classical art and learning in the 14th-16th Centuries • The American Renaissance was NOT a rebirth but more of a flowering or growing of literary and cultural maturity • Capital moved to Washington, D.C. from Philly • Library of Congress founded
Steam, Steel, and Spirit • Physical and technological growth • 1803 – Louisiana Purchase doubled nation’s size • National pride and self-awareness • Canals, turnpikes, and railroads expanded • 1849 – Gold Rush in California • Factories and Industry in the Northeast created jobs • Steel plow and telegraph
Slow March of Democracy • 1828 – Andrew Jackson – the People’s President • No land ownership required to vote • Women still not permitted to vote • 1838 – Trail of Tears forces many Native Americans west as their tribal lands were confiscated
World Stage • 1812 – War of 1812 convinced Europe that the US was on the world Stage • 1823 – Monroe Doctrine warns Europe not to interfere with Latin America • 1830s – Conflict with Mexico over Texas • 1845 – Texas joins Union (Florida becomes a state too) • 1861 Civil War
Relationship between Place and Literature • Americans inspired by land – size of nation and vast differences in landscapes • Americans realized that continent held many commercial possibilities • Physical grandeur inspired Americans to reach for vast possibilities • Explorers and writers create American Mythology in the vast wilderness and forests
Winds of Change • Prosperity brings problems • Child Labor • Unsafe working conditions • Fierce competition • Slavery – still a huge issue of contention • Builds to Civil War in 1861
Renaissance Literature • American Classics – writers such as Poe, Hawthorne, Melville, Emerson, Thoreau, and Dickinson • American Mythology – writers such as Irving, Cooper and Longfellow
Authors • Poe, Hawthorne, and Melville – dark side of human spirit • Emerson and Thoreau – nature • Dickinson – local landscape • Whitman – self and nation
Literature reflecting society • Technology – bigger, better, faster, and stronger – Americans want MORE • America is moving towards a different democracy – all WHITE MEN can vote • Slavery is a contentious issue • Americans still reading British classics like Dickens and Scott, but American authors are gaining ground
Three Visions • Social – How the New World rivaled the Old World • Frontiersman • Romantic – exploration of private self was as important as land expansion (imagination over reason) • Individualist • Transcendental – real truth is outside sensory experience (nature and spiritual merge) • Seeker
What makes American literature American? • Local dialects emerged and local grammar and syntax change as British English, Spanish, French, Dutch, and Native American languages merged • Colloquial English becomes common – more informal than stuffy British English • “Barbaric Yawp” – Whitman’s style that incorporated all of the languages and dialects of various areas of the country • Frontiersmen like Daniel Boone and Davey Crocket become topics of folktales
Romanticism • Emphasizes the individual over the institution – Ex. Hester Prynne vs. Church, Captain Ahab vs. logic and safety • American myth started with “a city upon a hill” (Boston) and eventually becomes a garden as western expansion makes writers realize there is a vast canvas of possibility • Romanticism has two faces • Bright and optimistic – humans are fundamentally good • Dark and shadowed by evil – humans resort naturally to crime, cruelty, and self-destruction • Self-reliance – Thoreau and Emerson urged Americans to trust themselves and think for themselves