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Division, Reconciliation, and Expansion

Division, Reconciliation, and Expansion. Prelude to War. North- Education, Banking, Science and Reform movements South- Slow paced, Rural, with Agricultural movements Controversy of slavery influenced the literature of the day. The Union is Dissolved.

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Division, Reconciliation, and Expansion

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  1. Division, Reconciliation, and Expansion

  2. Prelude to War North- Education, Banking, Science and Reform movements South- Slow paced, Rural, with Agricultural movements Controversy of slavery influenced the literature of the day.

  3. The Union is Dissolved Lincoln elected, South Carolina and 6 others seceded from union to form Confederate States of America. War lasts 4 years, North wins, 620,000 dead. Lincoln is assassinated on April 15, 1865

  4. An Expanding America ½ million farmers (including many emancipated slaves) move west due to Homestead Act Miners moved west aided by completion of Transcontinental Railroad in 1869

  5. The Disappearing Frontier 1890- Frontier seized to exist as Westward expansion grew Native Americans were forced into territories set aside by Congress

  6. A Changing American Society Electricity sparked many new inventions Immigration increased the population by 15 million in just 20 years Many urban families were poor and had to result to child labor, while some Corporation owners made large fortunes. Mark Twain dubbed this the “Gilded Age” Laborers, African Americans, and Women pushed for more rights and labor reforms.

  7. Literature of the Period

  8. Oh, Freedom! Slaves developed a unique type of music called “Spirituals” Frederick Douglass published his autobiography “Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass” that was also an indictment of slavery

  9. Wartime Voices Thousands of Diaries, letters, and journals were published from the war Many of President Lincoln’s speeches and letters were published such as the Gettysburg Address

  10. Frontier Voices • As westward expansion grew, more literature was rising from the West and Midwest • Mark Twain grew up in Missouri but moved to Nevada during the civil war • Not all frontier writings for European settlers, Mexican Americans also published many songs and ballads.

  11. Realism A reaction to romanticism that reflected the harsh reality of frontier life and the author’s reactions to the civil war Realism began shortly after the civil war The loss of U.S. lives shattered the nation’s idealism Young writers turned away from romanticism focusing on “real life”

  12. Realism continued Writers began focusing on life as ordinary people lived it They attempted to show characters and events in an honest, objective, almost factual way Loneliness and cultural isolation are a common theme

  13. Naturalism: an offshoot of Realism Naturalist writers also depicted real people in real situations, but they believed that forces larger than the individual shaped our destiny Forces: nature, environment, fate, heredity Naturalists depicted harsh realities because their hardships influenced their writing and artistic vision

  14. Literature of Discontent • Social discontent grew out of our nation’s industrialization • Kate Chopin: wrote about women’s desire for equality and independence • Naturalists saw industrialization as a force against which individuals were powerless • By 1914 America and it’s literature had grown up and traded it’s ideals for pragmatism (practicality)

  15. Mark Twain 30 Thousand copies of The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn were released in 1885 He used 7 different dialects to portray the speech patterns of different characters

  16. Mark Twain (cont.) Twain held very strong opinions of a variety of subjects Twain was one of the first authors to capture the every day speech of characters, and not the more formal, standard English that other writers used

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