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American Timeline notes

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260718731First Literature, Focus on nature and creation stories, reverence for nature as a spiritual mother, reflected religious beliefs, political systems, and social valuesNative American Liturature/Historical context
260718732Communicated orally; myths, legends, tales of tricksters and heroes, chants, lyrics;emphasizes importance of living in harmony with natural world;human beings have a kinship with animals, plants, the land, heavenly bodies, adn the elements;human and non-humans are seen as parts of a sacred whole.Genre/Style of native american literature
260718733Products of the reformation and renaissance;religion dominated lives and writings, everything was a message from god, believed in hard-work and simple, no frills living; read and reread the biblepuritans and pilgrims
260718734came as official members of church of england, extreme reformistspuritans
260718735known as seperatistspilgrims
260718736sermons, diaries, personal narrative, slave narratives, poetry;instructive, plain stylegenre/style of the Enlightenment
260718737Founded Jamestown in 1607; described the country as paradise, known as an adventurer;writer; difficult; somewhat of a braggartJohn Smith
260718738General Historie of Virginia; Pocahontas LegendJohn Smith
260718739gave the group the name of pilgrims, intended to land in virginia but landed on tip of cape cod; wife jumped overboard; part of writing the mayflower compact; elected governor of plymouth.william bradford
260718740"Of Plymouth Plantation"William Bradford
260718741first published American poet; used conceits; brother-in-law took verses nad published them under the title "The Tenth Muse Lately Sprung Up in America"; modest and somewhat embarrassed.Anne Bradstreet
260718742"To my dear and loving husband"; "Upon the burning of this house"; "The Flesh and the Spirit"; "The Author To Her Book"Anne Bradstreet
260718743clergyman, minister; [pems unheard until 1930 when discovred at Yale library; wrote conceits in the style of metaphysical poetry; examined inner self-commune with god; asks help from God to glorify God.Edward Taylor
260718744"Huswifery"; "Upon a Spider Catching a Fly"Edward Taylor
260718745lectured classmates on their sins; had 15 children, only 2 survived; two wives died; last wife went insane; unceasing writer with over 500 books and pamphlets.Cotton Mather
260718746"Magnelia Christi Americana"; "The Wonders of the Invisible World"Cotton Mather
260718747viewed god as punitive and distant; viewed man as basically evil; believed that he communicated directly with god; his sermons sent "whole congregations into hysterical fits of weeping"Jonathan Edwards
260718748"Sinners in the Hands of An Angry God"Jonathan Edwards
260718749Tried to tell men to look to reason; influenced by American Revolution against britian; military victory fanned nationalistic hopes for new literature; writers had genuine patriotism but were self-conscious; writers born and raised in england led to literary imiation; writing did not pay, no modern publishers, no audience, no adequate legal protection; Franklin started pirating of great European books; Copyright Law of 1790 protected American writers only.Age of Reason
260718750Political pamphlets, essays, travel writing, speeches, documents; instructive in values, highly ornate style of writing;Genre/ style of the Age of Reason
260718751writer, printer, publisher, scientist, philanthropist, diplomat; most famous/respected figure of his time; first great self-made man, second generation immigrant; taught self languages, widely read; well known for aphorisms: "Hastes makes Waste", "Early to Bed, Early to rise.....", "a small leak will sink a great ship"; never lost democratic sensibilityBenjamin Franklin
260718752Autobiography, Poor Richard's AlmanacBenjamin Franklin
260718753gave Europeans a glowing idea of opportunities for wealth, peace, and pride in america; first to exploit "melting pot" image of americaHector St. John De Crevecoeur
260718754"letters from an american farmer" (series of 12 letters)Hector St. John De Crevecoeur
260718755read aloud in public to excite audiences; soldiers read them in camps/trenches; inspired declaration of independenceThomas Paine
260718756"common sense"; "The American Crisis"Thomas Paine
260718757considered finest writer of eraThomas Jefferson
260718758Declaration of IndependenceThomas Jefferson
260718759fiery orator and voice of protestPatrick Henry
260718760"Speech in the Virginia Convention"Patrick Henry
260718761View of man as a man of reason; regarded man as a limited creature whose understanding was adequate to explore the infiniteneoclassicism
260718762incorporated new stirrings of European Romanticism; embraced liberal and democratic causes; revolutionary militiaman, captured by british, almost died, stimulating works of condemning cruelties of british; "Father of Poetry"; good transition between neoclassical and romanticism; thomas jefferson helped him establish the militant anti-federalist national gazette in 1791; became the first powerful, crusading newspaper editor in americaPhilip Frenau
260718763first american writer of imaginative literature to international fame; took ideas from german literature; witty, poor student, but well-read, youngest of 11 children in wealthy family; took the satirical writings of 18th century and spoofed the writings of his own time; early works displayed neoclassical pleasure in the comic qualities of life; work reflected shift in american literature from rationalism to sentimental romanticism; also major writer of romanticismWashington Irving
260718764The legend of Sleepy Hollow; Rip Van WinkleWashington Irving
260718765never saw frontier, yet writings focused on it, wrote sea novels, people disliked his work; created typical characters; grew up in luxurious mansion, expelled from yale, inherited money, went broke, began writing.James Fenimore Cooper
260718766"The Leather Stocking Tales"James Fenimore Cooper
260718767first african american writer of importance; born in africa, brought to america at 7, at 13 showed signs of great poet; materical came from bible and public events; worked use to prove blacks were not inferior to whites; characteristic of neoclassicism; nicknamed "The Sable Muse" in LondonPhillis Wheatly
260718768"To S. M., A young african painter on seeing his works"; "On Being brought from africa to america"Phillis Wheatly
260718769Expansion of book publishing, magazines, newspapers; industrial revolution; abolitionist movementRomanticism
260718770Short stories, novels, poetry; imagination over reason, intuition over fact; focused on fantastic of human experience; focused on inner feelingsl self and nature were one, self-awareness; Gothic LiteratureGenre/style of romanticism
260718771use of supernatural; characters with both good and evil, dark landscapes/depressed charactersGothic Literature
260718772sent radical individualism to the extreme; hero typically faced risk or destruction in pursuit of metaphysical self-discoveryTranscendentalism
260718773Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, Walk Whitman, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Emily DickinsonTranscendentalists
260718774Nathaniel HawthorneMajor Writer of Romanticism
260718775Edgar Allen PoeMajor Writer of Romanticism
260718776Moby DickHerman Melbille
260718777Harriet Beecher StoweUncle Tom's Cabin
260718778First American Romantic Poet whose works include "Thanatopsis"William Cullen Bryant

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