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AP World History - Chapter 11 Flashcards

Chapter 11 Vocab/ Key Terms

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7663879161IndianMisnomer created by Columbus referring to indigenous peoples of New World; implies social and ethic commonalities among Native Americans that did not exist (still around today)0
7663879162ToltecsSucceeded Teotihuancan culture in central Mexico; militaristic ethic (human sacrafice); influenced large territoy after 1000 bc and died down 1200 bc1
7663896058Topiltzinreligious leader and reformer, dedicated to god Quetzalcoatl2
7663907667QuetzalcoatlToltec deity; Feathered Serpent; adopted by Aztecs as a major god3
7663879164TenochtitlanFounded c1325 on marshy island in Lake Texcoco; center of Aztec power; part of Triple Alliance in 1434 to control most of central plateau in Mesoamerics4
7663918704TlalocMajor god of Aztecs; associated with fertility and the agricultural cycle; god of rain5
7663879165HuitcilopochtliAztec tribal patron god; central figure of cult of human sacrifice and warfare; old man god6
7663931947Nezhualcoyotlleading Aztec king of the 15th century7
7663879166Calpulliclans in Aztec society, later expanded to residential groups that distributed land and provided labor and warriors8
7663879167Chinampasbed of aquatic weeds, muds, and earth placed in frames made of cane and rooted in lakes to created "floating islands"; irrigated agriculture utilized by Aztecs9
7663879168Pochtecamerchant class of Aztec society, long distance trade in luxury items10
7663879170TwantinsuyuWord of Inca Empire, region of present day Columbia to Chile and eastword to northern Argentina11
7663879171Incaa member of any of the dominant groups of South American Indian peoples who established an empire in Peru prior to the Spanish conquest.12
7663879169Inca socialismView created by Spanish authors to describe Inca society as a type of utopia; image of Inca Empire as a carefully organized system in which every community collectively contributed to the whole13
7663879172PachacutiRuler of Inca society 1438-1471; launched series of military campaigns that gave Incas control of region Cuzco to shores of Lake Titicaca14
7663879175Split inheritanceInca practice of descent; all titles and political power went to successor, but wealth and land remained in hands of male descendants fpr support of cult of dead inca's mummy15
7663879176Temple of the SunInca religious center located in Cuzco; center of state religion; held mummies of past Incas.16
7663967875HuacasSacred spirits and powers that resided or appeared in caves, mountain, rocks, river, and other natural phenomena17
7663879177Curacasa member of the Inca provincial nobility often acting as administrator or ruler over an ayllu or group of ayllus.18
7663879178TambosWay stations used by Incas as inns and storehouses; supply centers for Inca armies on move; relay points for system of runners used to carry messages19
7663975865MitaForced labor system used in colonial Peru; allowed authorities to draft native workers20
7663879179QuipuSystem of knotted strings utilized by Incas in place of a writing system; could contain numerical and other types of info for census and financial records21
7663879163Aztecsa member of a Nahuatl-speaking state in central Mexico that was conquered by Cortés in 1521.22
7663879174Huayna Capacson of Topac; extended the Tawantinsuyu (Inca Empire) significantly to the south into present-day Chile and Argentina and tried to annex territories towards the north, in what is now Ecuador and southern Colombia.23

AP World Unit 4 Flashcards

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5893106741Impact of Mongols on China*Heavy taxation *Trade on Silk road *Reunify China *took out Confucian exam0
5893106742Zheng He's Voyages*1405-1433 CE1
5893106743Colombus' voyage of discovery and start of Colombian exchange1492CE2
5893106744What continued in the Early Ming Empire from Yuan (Mongol)?*kept administrative structure of province and an emperor *Moved the capital back to bejing *Still traded Proclain, Silk *used same calendar as the Mongols3
5893106745What changed under Early Ming Empire?*Civil service Exam; raised status of bureaucrats. *Capital first moved to Nanjing. *Less interaction with Central Asia. *Less trade along silk road. *Reject foreigners. *No paper money rather used Silver as currency. *Begin voyages in Indian Ocean (Zheng He). *Increasing tribute network.4
5893106746Later Ming Empire*factories producing ceramic, silk, proclelain. *painting,novel, poetry, resturants, selling paper, and ink. *imported Silver from Europe. *elites prepared their sons for Exams.5
5893106747Decline of Ming*Little ice age in 17th century *Agriculture distress and famine *epidemic disease *price inflation *corruption and workers revolt6
5893106748Rise of Qing*Mongols threatened Ming *Manchu troops helped fight of Mongols and took over China *adopted Chinese institution and polices7
5893106749Consolidationmeans to bring together8
5893106750Ming legitmacy*confucianisim *Military *Mandate of Heaven *tributary System *architecture9
5893106751Ming way of Consolidation*Military *Confucian bureacracy *divinding in provinces10
5893106752Why did Zheng He's Voyage stop?* Confucian gov't got nervous *Jelaousy *Voyages were expensive11
5893106753Forbidin Cityis in the capital Bejing where the palace complex is located.12
5893106754architecture used for legitimacy*colecium *Aztec temple *Great walls of China *Pyramid *Versailles13
5893106755Why did rulers use architecture for legitmacy?* it shows wealth and military power * to have lasting legacy14
5893106756Renaissance*1350-1500 *European contracts with the Middle East during the crusades contributes to the start of the Reaissance. *Began in Italy *Byzantine empire inspired much of the art and ideas of renaissance.(shakespeare, Leonardo Davinchi) *Humanisim(studied human beings and abilites), wealthy italian merchants funded artists (display of wealth and power).15
5893106757Protestant Reformation*Martin Luther disagree with communion, confession of sins. *salvation through faith alone *Ninety-Five-Thesis, Catholics excommunicated him. *resent of many authority of pope and corruption made it favorable to catholics *printed press-> more bible-> more literate people-> made thier own interpretations. *Henry creatted Anglicanism *John Caviln created presbyterians16
5893106758Result of Protestant Reformation*Increased European questioning of political authority *strengthened monarchs authortity as pope's power decreased. *Encouraged education17
5893106759Scientific Revolution*Galileo and Keplar created telescope, Geo-centric model *Galilio's claim of sun at the middle of Solar system-> got arrested by Roman court because it was against catholics faith. *Issac Newton-optic, calculus and law of motion. *scientist question traditional belief *secular humanisim18
5893106760Rise of Absolute Monarchs*kings began to tax thier town, trade-> kings became less dependent on military and financial support *The hundred Years War and the Reconquista in Spain-> nationalisim (loyality to a nation rather than feudalisim) *Gun powder and technology-> makes armored knights less effective19
5893106761Monarchs Legitimacy (justify rule)*Divine rule (all branches controlled by one person) *religion *military conquest *lineage20
5893106762The English Civil War*King Charles supported loyalists "cavaliers" Vs. Parliamentary forces under Oliver Cromwell *interregrium or no monarch period after King Charles I death *restoration; brings back the royal family. Parliment agrees to work with the king.21
5893106763Limited monarch*Jury of peers *taxation with consent of lords22
5893106764European motive*economic motives *spread religion *Glory(military, political motives) *Needed following technologies -Compass from China -design of vessels -Caravel(best European ship) -astorable enabled to determine location23
5893106765Portugal*prince Henry and sagres research institute *motive-> spreading christianity and find christian allies *explored India and Brazil, Atlantic islands *recieved AFrican Gold, sugar plantaion24
5893106766Spain*Christopher Colombus, Amerigo, Balba (explorers) *Motive-> defeat muslim empire, discover lands and find shortcut to Indian ocean. *Explored India, America, Island of Caaribbean *Colonized philippines, traded on Indian Ocean, make profit25
5893106767Western Africa* Accepted portugal with ceremony and formed monopoly on trade *Kongo used Chrstianity as official religion and catholic religion spread. *Exported gold and slaves to portugal for firearms and alliance during war *Excessive slave trade led to rebellion and decline in king's auhtority.26
5893106768Eastern AFrica*natives accepted portugese as allies *they had profitable trade *Ethiopians were interested with Christianity *portugal later bombs Swhaili Coast27
5893106769Indian Ocean states*Europe got foods from colonies which decreased starvation-> potatoe famine *Portugal bombed Indian ports and dominate their control of Indian Ocean trade *Monopolized trade between China and Japan and taxed traders on Indian ocean *maritime laws for trade28
5893106770What stayed the same in Indian ocean States*Spices, gold, ivory and other luxury goods were traded *spread buddhisim, Islam *monsoon winds *Boats (Junks, dhows)29
5893106771Change in Indian Ocean*Portuguese dominate it *colonize 10 regions *Build forts in Swahili States *Italians and Ottomans controlled mediteranian, so portugese had to colonize other regions to get involved in the trade.30
5893106772The Americas*Spanish conquered the Amerindians, and Inca *small pox killed natives and brought African slaves *Coca, Tomatoes, Corn-> grew. Domesticated animals, sugar(cash crop)-> imported. *encomienda system- cooerced labor system *Christian missonaries, culture syncretism31
5893106773Spanish America*Viceroy (governor) gained power because European official were not able to control distant colonies *Catholic Church spread Christianity and introduced Uinversities. *Bishop Las Casas outlawed slavery of Amerindians *Church were against culture syncretism.32
5893106774Old World (western Hemisphere)*Horses *Slaves *Cattle *Sugar *Christianity *small pox33
5893106775New World(America)*Corn *potatoes *tomatoes *beans *coca *Silver34
5893106776Bolivia*spains *silver mine (also Peru) *wheat, livestock, and textile *Mita labor system35
5893106777Mexico*silver mine *deforestation *rising fuel price *wage labor36
5893106778Brazil*Sugar plantation *African slave *plantation labor *control trade b/n spanish and Europe *maroon communities- escaped slaves go to less settled areas and often go to Amerindian lands.37
5893106779PeninsularesEuropeans whose goal was not to settle but to rule over the church and government and were trusted more.38
5893106780Creoleswealthy merchants born in America but have European decent; however, posseses no power which creates conflicts between Peninsulares and Creoles.39
5893106781Hierarchy in the Americans1) peninsulares 2) Creoles 3) Mestizo, Mulattos 4) Africans, Native Americans *race, place of origin and wealth based Hierarchy.40
5893106782capitalism* development of financial institution like bank, stock exchanges41
5893106783Mercantilism*Monopolize the profits produced in their colonies by controlling trade and accumulating capital in the form of Gold and silver.42
5893106784Trans-Saharan trade* Manual labor *coercive labor *status symbol * Slaves can be young (men, women) *textile, domestic entertainment *less racial difference43
5893106785Atlantic Slavery* Manual labor *coercive labor *status symbol *Slaves as property *Only healthy men were taken *racial difference and cultural syncretism44
5893106786West and Central Africa*Less agriculture *warfare *decline economy *(Africa took captives of war for slavery which increased war in Africa and reduced number of farmer because young men were taken; this resulted for the decline of the economy)45
5893106787Triangular trade*North America- Crops and silver to Europe *Africa- Slaves and Gold also known as The Middle Passage *Europe- Processed goods, guns to Africa46
5893106788Cultural syncretism*Two or more distinct cultures combing to creat a new practice or belief. *food, music, people, and * religion: During Spain Rule on the Americans (Catholic Christianity), Amerindian's polystetic religion (Santeria, Vodun, Candomble)47
5893106789Southern Colonies*English Colonizer *led by elected assembly *fur trade (African trade, timber, tobacco, firearms, plantation) *African language, hierarchical society48
5893106790New England*Pilgrims and Puritans colonizer *less government control *fish, timber *no diversity and gender balance49
5893106791Mid Atlantic*Pennsylvania colonizer *corrupt public administration *diverse population *skilled craftsmen50
5893106792French America*France was colonizer *fur trade *warfare with England for land *fire arms, metal tools51
5893106793Ottoman EmpireOriginate in Anatolia, expanded to Southeastern Europe. *Sultan destroyed Wall of Constantinople with Cannon and conquered which ends the Byzantine empire. *Adding Venice into their territory opened trade. *Janissaries were military division of Christian prisoners *devshirme is a tax system imposed on Christians to take away son for the military and convert them to Islam. *For legitimacy they used military, religion, and bureaucracy. * Gun powder increased cost, and brought high taxes *peasants revolted (b/c of tax) and got devshime abolished *Ottoman's trade with Europeans open long-distant trade. but later failed and Mumluks took control.52
5893106794Mughal Empire*Hindus majority but Muslim empire *Babur was the founder; he invaded from central Asia *mansabs granted land revenues to military officers. *they traded cotton cloth for Europeans aid militarily *Rajputs were Hindu warriors *Akbar lifted tax on non muslim, religious tolerant, court culture reflected mixture of muslim and Hindu *Akbar had weak army and ruling were not integrated into the imperial structure *Aurangzeb re-imposed tax on Hindu, failed to unify and was religiously intolerant. *Sikhism-mixture of Muslim and Hindu *Mughal declined b/c failure to integrate new territories, regional powers challenged the empire, and Iran invaded them.53
5893106795Religion in MughalSikhism- Guru is founder Islam- Mosques, Koran, prophet, leaders of Mughals Hinduism-Veda is founder, have caste system, have polytheism. Sikhism and Hinduism- reincarnation, temples, no prophet, persecuted under Mughals Sikhism and Islam- no caste system, equality, monotheism Sikhism, Hindu, Islam- have place of worship and sacred text, and monotheism, community service.54
5893106796Russia*Russia was land locked b/c of no ports *Siberia opened fur trade *land based empire b/c they were surrounded by forests and land. the king->Tsar *Cossacks were Russian herders *PETER THE GREAT traveled to discover Western Europe's secret to a prosperous empire. *have to take merit test for military job *Peter took Swedish's control of Baltic sea, built St.Petersburg, imitated European's style by shaving of the nobility's beard. * women's status increased while Boyars role in the government decreased in return imposed forced labor on serfs so that they work for the Boyars. *Increased taxes, brought Orthodox church under state control becoming an absolute monarch. *Catherine continued peter by trading with Western Europe and conquering more lands to the Black sea.55
5893106797Japanese Reunification*Daimyos were warlords and landowners *Got firearms from Europe b/c it is easier to train and help for the war against Korea. *sold copper and silver for silk and had coinage *Banned Christianity and European missionaries *placed restriction on trade by limiting time, samurai's role and trading ports. *Dutches learning movement- taught Japan technologies, ship building, and maths *japan invaded Asian mainland lead Asian to impose high taxes, lose population; it lead to the invasion of Manchus. *Tokugawa moved capital to Edo and united Japan *roads, maritime transport connected cities and allowed Daimyo to visit Edo frequently. *rice (tax payment), silk, fans, porcelain, books were traded. *military based hierarchy, feudalisim structure, mostly Buddhist. *Forty-seven Ronin was the transformation of Japan from military to civil society. *Alternate Intendent policy made the damaiyo and his son spend time with the king separetly. (so that the Shogun could kill his son if his father rebels just like the Inca's policy) *Shinto(native religion and ukiyo-e (native painting)56
5893106798Japan hierarchy1) Emperor ( political figure, no action) 2)Shogun (gets loyality and gives land to Daimyo) 3) Daimyo (gets military service and gives land and wealth to Samurai) 4) Samuri (Gets food and gives protection) 5) Peasant 6)farmers- give food 7)artisans- give cloth 8) Merchants (Confucian policy placed them lower class)57
5893106799Qing Empire* after manchu troops took over china, they named it Qing Empire. *Most populations were ethnic chinese *Trade was limited b/c to -maintain control over trade -facilitate tax collection -supress privacy *Canton system permitted one market per sector *Bristish was worried about trade deficit with China * Macartney mission, british sent macartney to revise the trade system but Qing refused to open trade ports. *increase in population-> intensive agriculture-> deforestation-> water erosion-> flooding-> peasant sought job->rebellion *Jesuits main goal was to spread christianity -Matteo Ricci was a Jesuit and chinsese scholar who adapted christianity into chinese tradition *built roads, waterworks, cut taxes, incentive established for resettling areas devestated by peasant rebellion. *Kangxi sent forces to attack Amur and Albazin and negotiated treaty with Russia. *Kangxi welcomed Jesuit b/c he was open to math & science *Jesuit compromise thier religion by tolerating ancestor worship-> created disagreement in china-> Kangxi order expulsion of people who don't agree with ancestor worshipping. *Christains started being persecuted.58
5893106800Qing Empire continuity and change*Continuity* - recieve silver for trade goods -restrictive trade *Changes* -Qing emperor was interested in scientific knowledge exchange -population growth because of colombial exchange -Qing more open interaction with central asia59

AP World Period 4 Flashcards

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5163863459African DiasporaName given to the spread of African peoples across the Atlantic via the slave trade.0
5163863460AkbarThe most famous emperor of India's Mughal Empire (r. 1556-1605); his policies are noted for their efforts at religious tolerance and inclusion.1
5163863461AurangzebMughal emperor (r. 1658-1707) who reversed his predecessors' policies of religious tolerance and attempted to impose Islamic supremacy.2
5163863462BeninWest African kingdom (in what is now Nigeria) whose strong kings sharply limited engagement with the slave trade.3
5163863463BhaktiHindu devotional movement that flourished in the early modern era, emphasizing music, dance, poetry, and rituals as means by which to achieve direct union with the divine.4
5163863464cartazA pass that the Portuguese required of all merchant vessels attempting to trade in the Indian Ocean.5
5163863465Catholic Counter-ReformationAn internal reform of the Catholic Church in the sixteenth century; thanks especially to the work of the Council of Trent (1545-1563), Catholic leaders clarified doctrine, corrected abuses and corruption, and put a new emphasis on education and accountability.6
5163863466Columbian exchangeThe massive transatlantic interaction and exchange between the Americas and Afro-Eurasia that began in the period of European exploration and colonization.7
5163863467conquistadoresSpanish conquerors of the Native American lands, most notably the Aztec and Inca empires.8
5163863468Council of TrentThe main instrument of the Catholic Counter- Reformation (1545-1563), at which the Catholic Church clarified doctrine and corrected abuses9
5163863469creolesSpaniards born in the Americas.10
5163863470DahomeyWest African kingdom that became strong through its rulers' exploitation of the slave trade.11
5163863471DaimyoFeudal lords of Japan who ruled with virtual independence thanks to their bands of samurai warriors.12
5163863472Darwin, CharlesHighly influential English biologist (1809-1882) whose theory of natural selection continues to be seen by many as a threat to revealed religious truth.13
5163863473deismBelief in a divine being who created the cosmos but who does not intervene directly in human affairs.14
5163863474devshirmeThe tribute of boy children that the Ottoman Turks levied from their Christian subjects in the Balkans; the Ottomans raised the boys for service in the civil administration or in the elite Janissary infantry corps.15
5163863475Edict of NantesIssued by French king Henry IV that granted considerable religious toleration to French Protestants and ended the French Wars of Religion.16
5163863476European EnlightenmentEuropean intellectual movement of the eighteenth century that applied the lessons of the Scientific Revolution to human affairs and was noted for its commitment to open-mindedness and inquiry and the belief that knowledge could transform human society.17
5163863477Freud, SigmundAustrian doctor and the father of modern psychoanalysis (1856-1939); his theories about the operation of the human mind and emotions remain influential today18
5163863478Galilei, GalileoItalian astronomer (1564-1642) who further developed the ideas of Copernicus and whose work was eventually suppressed by the Catholic Church.19
5163863479HuguenotsThe Protestant minority in France.20
5163863480Jesuits in ChinaSeries of missionaries in the late sixteenth and seventeenth centuries who, inspired by the work of Matteo Ricci, made extraordinary efforts to understand and become a part of Chinese culture in their efforts to convert the Chinese elite, although with limited success.21
5163863481Little Ice AgeA period of cooling temperatures and harsh winters that lasted for much of the early modern era.22
5163863482Luther, MartinGerman priest and theologian (1483-1546) who inaugurated the Protestant Reformation movement in Europe23
5163863483ManilaCapital of the Spanish Philippines and a major multicultural trade city that already had a population of more than 40,000 by 1600.24
5163863484Marx, KarlGerman philosopher (1818-1883) whose view of human history as a class struggle formed the basis of socialism.25
5163863485mestizoLiterally, "mixed"; a term used to describe the mixed-race population of Spanish colonial societies in the Americas.26
5163863486Middle PassageName commonly given to the journey across the Atlantic undertaken by African slaves being shipped to the Americas.27
5163863487MulattoesTerm commonly used for people of mixed African and European blood.28
5163863488Ninety-five ThesesList of debating points about the abuses of the Church, posted by Martin Luther on the door of a church in Wittenberg in 1517; the Church's strong reaction eventually drove Luther to separate from Catholic Christianity.29
5163863489peninsularesIn the Spanish colonies of Latin America, the term used to refer to people who had been born in Spain; they claimed superiority over Spaniards born in the Americas.30
5163863490Protestant ReformationMassive schism within Christianity that had its formal beginning in 1517 with the German priest Martin Luther; while the leaders of the movement claimed that they sought to "reform" a Church that had fallen from biblical practice, in reality the movement was radically innovative in its challenge to Church authority and its endorsement of salvation "by faith alone."31
5163863491Scientific RevolutionGreat European intellectual and cultural transformation that was based on the principles of the scientific method.32
5163863492settler coloniesAreas in which colonizing people settled in large numbers, rather than simply spending relatively small numbers to exploit the region; particularly noteworthy in the case of North America.33
5163863493shogunIn Japan, a supreme military commander.34
5163863494SikhismReligious tradition of northern India founded by Guru Nanak ca. 1500; combines elements of Hinduism and Islam and proclaims the brotherhood of all humans and the equality of men and women.35
5163863495silver drainTerm often used to describe the siphoning of money from Europe to pay for the luxury products of the East, a process exacerbated by the fact that Europe had few trade goods that were desirable in Eastern markets36
5163863496soft goldNickname used in the early modern period for animal furs, highly valued for their warmth and as symbols of elite status; in several regions, the fur trade generated massive wealth for those engaged in it37
5163863497Thirty Years' WarHighly destructive war that eventually included most of Europe; fought for the most part between Protestants and Catholics, the conflict ended with the Peace of Westphalia38
5163863498trading post empireForm of imperial dominance based on control of trade rather than on control of subject peoples.39
5163863499VoltairePen name of the French philosopher François-Marie Arouet (1694-1778), whose work is often taken as a model of Enlightenment questioning of traditional values and attitudes; noted for his deism and his criticism of traditional religion.40
5163863500Wahhabi IslamMajor Islamic movement led by the Muslim theologian Abd al-Wahhab (1703-1792) that advocated an austere lifestyle and strict adherence to the sharia (Islamic law).41
5163863501yasakTribute that Russian rulers demanded from the native peoples of Siberia, most often in the form of furs.42

The Unfinished Nation, Chapter 12 Flashcards

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7107163047A catalyst for an American feminist movement was a London convention in 1840 that dealt withabolition.0
7107163048A former slave, __________ __________ founded an antislavery newspaper and wrote his autobiography.Frederick Douglass1
7107163049Abolitionists successfully funded the legal battle and repatriation of Africans who seized the __________, a Spanish slave ship.Amistad2
7107163050All of the following painters were associated with the Hudson River school EXCEPTJames Whistler.3
7107163051All of the following people helped create a distinct American literature EXCEPTSydney Smith.4
7107163052All of the following were American authors creating distinctively American literature EXCEPTAsher Durand.5
7107163053Americans contributed which of the following advances to medical science in the 1800s?-William Morton's use of either as an anesthetic. -Oliver Wendell Holmes's discovery that disease could be transmitted from person to person.6
7107163054Both Perfectionists and Shakersredefined traditional gender roles.7
7107163055Due to their commitment to _____, all Shakers had to choose the faith for themselves.celibacy8
7107163056During the nineteenth century, the largest obstacle to improved medical care in America was theabsence of basic knowledge about disease.9
7107163057Edgar Allan Poe's most famous poem, which established him as a major literary figure, was"The Raven".10
7107163058Edgar Allan Poe's work focused on individuals who were experiencingemotions of sadness and terror.11
7107163059How did Americans respond to the cholera epidemics of the 1830s and 1840s?-Threats to public health led to increased interest in new health theories. -Community health boards were created to address the spread of disease.12
7107163060How did anti-abolitionist sentiments affect the abolitionist movement in the late 1830s?Increased violence toward abolitionists created factions within the movement.13
7107163061How did free blacks in the North feel toward the slaves?They were empathetic and became actively involved in the abolition movement.14
7107163062How did Henry David Thoreau's beliefs shape his relationship with government?He refused to support any government that did not match his personal morals.15
7107163063How did William Lloyd Garrison negatively affect the abolitionist movement?His positions became radical, which troubled many in the movement.16
7107163064In his youth, Ralph Waldo Emersonwas a Unitarian minister, until he left the clergy in 1832.17
7107163065In "Nature" (1836), __________ __________ __________ described a quest for fulfillment through communion with the natural world.Ralph Waldo Emerson18
7107163066In order to practice his philosophy of withdrawing from society to live a simple life, Henry David Thoreau built a small cabinnear Walden Pond.19
7107163067In the 1840s, abolitionists in the United States constituteda small percentage of the national population.20
7107163068In the early nineteenth century, the American Colonization Societywas founded by white Virginians opposed to slavery.21
7107163069In the mid-nineteenth century, romanticismNone of these answers is correct.22
7107163070In the mid-nineteenth century, the general European attitude toward American art and literaturewas that American artists had little to offer Europe.23
7107163071In the Oneida Community, women were protected from unwanted _____, while the most distinctive feature of Shakerism was _____.childbearing: celibacy24
7107163072In the West, missionaries established schools for American Indians, believing thatIndians could be "civilized" by learning how to assimilate to white culture.25
7107163073One of the first communities of transcendentalists wasBrook Farm.26
7107163074One of the most enduring of the pre-Civil War utopian colonies wasOneida.27
7107163075Popular nineteenth-century American painting aimed to capturethe wonder and awe of rugged, wild landscapes.28
7107163076Prior to 1860, public education in the United Statesgave the nation one of the highest literacy rates in the world.29
7107163077Prior to the Civil War, free blacks in the North tended to bestrongly opposed to southern slavery.30
7107163078Prior to the Civil War, the Liberty Partypromoted "free soil".31
7107163079Prior to the Civil War, the religious denomination most active in feminism was theQuakers.32
7107163080Reform movements emerged in America in the mid-nineteenth century in part because of adesire for social stability and discipline in the face of change.33
7107163081Romantic authors in the South were more likely than writers in the North todefend the southern way of life, including slavery.34
7107163082Shaker societiessaw women exercise more power than men.35
7107163083Solitary confinement was meant to give prisoners opportunities to meditate on their wrongdoings and develop "__________."penitence36
7107163084Southern antebellum writers often wrotehistorical romances.37
7107163085The antislavery movement in the early 1800s was based on the idea ofcolonization.38
7107163086The black abolitionist who called for uncompromising opposition to and a violent overthrow of slavery in his 1829 An Appeal to the Coloured Citizens of the World wasDavid Walker.39
7107163087The early feminist movement began at a world antislavery convention whenAmerican women delegates were turned away.40
7107163088The first great American school of painters was known as the __________ __________ School.Hudson River41
7107163089The founders of the Perkins School for the Blind believed thateven the blind or handicapped could discover inner strength and wisdom.42
7107163090The great network of institutions and charitable services for handicapped individuals that developed during the prewar years was known as theBenevolent Empire.43
7107163091The Hudson River school of painters emphasized in their work the importance ofnatural beauty.44
7107163092The Massachusetts reformer who built a national movement for new methods of treating the mentally ill wasDorothea Dix.45
7107163093The meeting at Seneca Falls in 1848 generated a statement on women's rights patterned on theDeclaration of Independence.46
7107163094The most important and popular American painters of the early nineteenth centuryconsidered untamed nature the best source of inspiration......????47
7107163095The nineteenth-century Protestant revivalist movement, known as the __________ __________ Awakening, was based on the idea that everyone was capable of salvation and spiritual rebirth.Second Great48
7107163096The primary goal of the 1840s community experiment known as Brook Farm was topermit all members to realize their full potential as individual beings.49
7107163097The prison reform movement sought to rehabilitate inmates through-solitary confinement. -silence on prison work crews.50
7107163098The pseudoscience of __________ made inferences about individuals' intelligence and character by studying the shape of their skull.phrenology51
7107163099The Second Great Awakening combined which two elements of nineteenth-century American culture?-reform movements. -Protestant revivalism.52
7107163100The Supreme Court ruling in Prigg v. Pennsylvania (1842)led to the passage of "personal liberty laws".53
7107163101The tradition of American regional humor established by the southern literary realists found its most powerful voice in the works ofMark Twain.54
7107163102The transcendentalists defined reason as an individual'scapacity to grasp truth and beauty by expressing emotions.55
7107163103The transcendentalists defined understanding as an individual'scapacity to repress instincts and to use the intellect to learn by rote.56
7107163104The transcendentalists viewed nature as asource of deep personal inspiration.57
7107163105The transcendentalists were among the first Americans toanticipate the environmental movement of the twentieth century.58
7107163106Through novels such as The Last of the Mohicans, James Fenimore Cooper examined the significance ofAmerica's westward expansion.59
7107163107Uncle Tom's Cabin gained national popularity in the mid-nineteenth century by being reproduced in which of the following forms?-theatrical production. -novel.60
7107163108Upon which document in American History is the language of the Declaration of Sentiments based?Declaration of Independence61
7107163109Walt Whitman's poetry helped make _____ one of the defining ideals of antebellum America.individualism62
7107163110What has been the effect of marriage on women, according to the document?Husbands essentially become masters.63
7107163111What is the effect on the morality of women that results from male privileges, according to the Declaration?Women become irresponsible.64
7107163112What is the position of the Declaration of Sentiments on the question of female suffrage?It is an inalienable right.65
7107163113What most distinguished James Fenimore Cooper as a truly American novelist?He celebrated the American wilderness.66
7107163114What was the biggest problem facing American medicine in the first half of the nineteenth century?Doctors had little understanding of how disease was spread.67
7107163115What was the result for women who owned property in their own name?They were taxed without representation.68
7107163116What was unique about William Lloyd Garrison's philosophy of abolition?-He believed abolitionists should view slavery from the point of view of slaves. -He believed that the antidote to slavery was full American citizenship for all slaves.69
7107163117Which of the following accurately describe transcendentalists' mode of communal living?-They used manual labor to transition from a world of intellect to the natural world. -They equally shared in the labor so each could have leisure time to cultivate the self.70
7107163118Which of the following best describes formal schooling in the South before the Civil War?African Americans were barred from formal education, and only one-third of white children were enrolled in schools.71
7107163119Which of the following best describes the proportion of northerners who were pro-abolition?a small minority72
7107163120Which of the following best describes the state of public education in 1830?No state had a system of universal public education.73
7107163121Which of the following best reflects white male abolitionists' attitudes toward female abolitionists?It was inappropriate for women to be outspoken activists.74
7107163122Which of the following is NOT a Mormon belief?Life-long celibacy is important.75
7107163123Which of the following major writers of the antebellum period was a southerner?Edgar Allan Poe76
7107163124Which of the following statements is true of free blacks living in the North in 1850?They were at times poorer than slaves in the South.77
7107163125Which of the following was NOT a demand made in the "Declaration of Sentiments and Resolutions"?Women should have their own social spheres.78
7107163126Which of the following was NOT a health fad in the antebellum years?antibiotics79
7107163127Which of the following was NOT a reason that many northern whites were against abolition?The abolition movement was rapidly gaining ground among whites in the South.80
7107163128Which of the following was NOT an idea Walt Whitman celebrated in his work?urban living81
7107163129Which of the following were goals established at the 1848 Seneca Falls convention for women's rights?-the right to vote. -equality with men.82
7107163130Which of the following were NOT reforms implemented by Horace Mann?-making school attendance mandatory for individuals under 16. -lengthening the academic year to nine months.83
7107163131Which of the following were problems for doctors in the early 1800s?-Many traditional physicians mistrusted innovation and experimentation. -They were not highly regarded in their communities. -Many of their peers were quacks or poorly educated.84
7107163132Which of the following women were among the leaders of the nineteenth-century feminist movement?-Elizabeth Cady Stanton. -Susan B. Anthony. -Dorothea Dix.85
7107163133Which statement about Mormonism is FALSE?It advocated sexual equality.86
7107163134Who among the following was NOT a participant in American communal living?Walt Whitman87
7107163135Who led the migration of 12,000 Mormons from Illinois to what would become Salt Lake City, Utah?Brigham Young88
7107163136Who wrote the 1841 novel The Deerslayer?James Fenimore Cooper89
7107163137Why did early efforts to end slavery by repatriating slaves fail?Many African Americans were not interested in emigrating to Africa.90
7107163138Why did many of the early feminists also identify as Quakers?-Many Quaker preachers and community leaders were women. -Many Quakers believed in sexual equality.91
7107163139Why is the rhetoric of this document so effective?The language is based historically on the Declaration of Independence.92

The Unfinished Nation Chapter 11 Flashcards

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4657503942Which of the following best describes elementary and secondary schools in the South before the Civil War?They were inferior to those in the Northeast.0
4657504257Most slaves received which of the following?1. Cheap clothing and shoes 2. A simple but adequate diet1
4657505047The only successful large-scale slave uprising was led by ___ ____, a slave preacher who led an armed band of slaves to murder 60 white men, women, and children in Virginia.Nat Turner2
4657505514Approximately what percentage of white southerners lived in slaveholding households in the mid-1800s25%3
4657505749Which of the following contributed to the slow development of industry in the South?1. Booming agricultural expansion 2. Inadequate transportation system4
4657507021The shared language developed by slaves- often referred to a pidgin- combined African languages and the _____ languageEnglish5
4657507218How did the slave codes define a person's race?Individuals with a presumed trace of African ancestry were black6
4657507547Slave women generally were responsible for which of the following tasks?1. Child rearing 2. Providing medical attention 3. Cooking meals7
4657508041By the 1830's, the center of ____ cultivation was moving westward into the Piedmont area, while the farmers of Virginia, Maryland and North Carolina shifted to other crops.Tobacco8
4657508277Which of the following effects did the cult of honor have on the lives of southern white women?1. Men expected women to be subordinate in exchange for defending women's honor 2. White southern men felt obligated to protect white women9
4657508592Slave religion was primarily a form ofChristianity10
4657509029Slaves often preferred to live onLarge plantations because they could create their own social world in the slave quarters11
4657509282Which of the following best describe the lives of slaves in the South?1. Female slaves often received particularly vindictive treatment from masters' wives 2. Slave women labored in the fields and also cooked and cleaned12
4657509917Which of the following roles was not among those assigned to house slaves?Planter13
4657510401Which of these forms of transportation were either nonexistent or inadequately developed in the South prior to the Civil War?1. Canals 2. Finished roads 3. Railroads14
4657510821Which of the following best describes how members of the white southern upper class viewed themselves?As true aristocrats, much like those in the Old World15
4657511413In southern cities, slaves performed many of the menial jobs that in the North were performed by _____ immigrants.European16
4657511934Nonslaveholding whites who lived in backcountry areas like the Appalachians and Ozarks were known asHill people17
4657512236Which of the following are accurate statements regarding the domestic slave trade?1. Some slaves moved from one part of the South to another with their owners 2. Most slaves were moved by professional slave traders18
4657513124Through the musical tradition of the _____, Africans in America expressed both their religious faith and their hopes for freedom in song.Spiritual19
4657513233Before revisions were made to state laws in the 1830s, slaves could be set free byThe master's will after the master died20
4657513626In 1839 a group of slaves in Cuba took over a ship, the ____, and attempted to sail back to their homelands in AfricaAmistad21
4657516034What technological development made the large-scale cultivation of short-staple cotton possible?Cotton gin22
4657516365Which of the following best describe how slaves' practice of religion differed from that of whites?1. Slave religion often blended elements of African religious traditions and Christianity 2. Slaves' prayer meetings often included vocal exclamations and fervent chanting23
4657517340Before the Civil War, the principal means of transporting goods in the South wasWater24
4657517715Which of the following advantages did house slaves often have over field slaves1. Access to leftovers from the master's table 2. Less physically-backbreaking labor25
4657519316Which of the following best describes an aspect of the domestic slave trade?Slave families were often separated, including the separation of children from parents.26
4657521266The only successful large-scale slave uprising was led by ___ ____, a slave preacher who led an armed band of slaves to murder 60 white men, women and children in VirginiaNat Turner27
4657521649Which of the following best describes the position of female slaves?They often were separated from their husbands and fathers.28
4657522009Which of the following best describes slaves' practice of religion?It was monitored by whites because autonomous black churches were illegal in the South.29
4657523629How did the slave labor system affect white southern women?1. It threatened their relationships with their husbands, who often had sexual relationships with female slaves 2. It helped spare them from hard labor30
4657524189Most whites living in the Appalachians or the OzarksPracticed subsistence agriculture, growing most of their crops for their own use.31
4657526061The majority of students attending the South's several hundred colleges and universities wereSons of wealthy planters.32
4657526876Which of the following are accurate statements about the foreign slave trade?1. Despite a federal law prohibiting the importation of slaves, smuggling continued as late as the 1850's. 2. At a southern convention for commerce in 1858, delegates voted to repeal all laws against slave imports, but the government did not comply.33
4657535090Which of the following best describes the prevalence of slaveholding in the South?Only a very small minority of southern whites owned slaves?34
4657535830What social effects did slavery have on southerners?1. It segregated blacks from whites 2. It created a unique bond of mutual reliance between masters and slaves 3. Southern black developed a culture different from that of southern whites35
4657538247Southern women who lived on farms of modest size regularly engaged in which of the following activities?1. Agricultural tasks 2. Spinning and weaving 3. Overseeing slaves36
4657539199Which of the following best describes the frequency of slave revolts in the South?Slave uprising were rare, but the possibility kept white southerners on alert37
4657540834Which of the following contributed to how the South remained so different from the North?1. White southerners argued that grace and refinement were more important than rapid growth and development 2. While the agricultural economy of the Northeast had declined, that of the South was booming.38
4657542655Which of the following is an advantage that short-staple cotton has over other cotton varieties?It can be grown in a variety of climates and soils.39
4657543289When white southerners referred to slavery as the "peculiar institution," they usually meant that it wasDistinctive and special40
4657546547Which of these forms of transportation were either nonexistent or inadequately developed in the South prior to the Civil War.1. Railroads 2. Canals 3. Finished Roads41
4657547766Why did tobacco cultivation move westward in the 1830s?Tobacco farming had exhausted the land, so farmers had to switch to other crops42
4657549758Which of the following were among the activities slaves were forbidden from doing under the slave codes of southern states?1. Strike a white person, even in self-defense 2. Hold property 3. Carry firearms43
4657550406Which of the following best describes most members of the southern planter class?They were newly wealthy and among the first in their families to succeed at farming.44
4657551853Which of the following was part of the slave codes?Whites could not teach slaves to read or write.45
4657553187Which of the following was the most likely way that slaves could earn money to buy their freedom?Marketing a skill to make additional money46
4657553649Which of the following best describes the relationship between agriculture and business in the South?Most successful businesses were related to the needs of plantation owners.47
4657554982In what ways did white southern society differ from the myths of a planter "aristocracy"?1. Many planters had to live a modest lifestyle, because most of their money was invested in land and slaves 2. Many of the great southern landowners were still first-generation settlers 3. Many planters were competitive businessmen48
4657556379Which of the following were the most common hazards for slaves who tried to escape their masters by running away?1. Long distance to safety 2. "Slave patrols" looking for escaped blacks 3. Ignorance about geography49
4657556991Southern whites who did not own slaves were linked to the plantation economy by which of the following?1. Shared ideas of racial superiority 2. Dependence on plantation owners for access to cotton gins 3. Family ties50
4657559134What is one reason slave women often held additional authority in the plantation system?They acted as single parents when their husbands were sold to other plantations.51
4657561986One of the most powerful stereotypes of slaves was the "____," a shuffling, dimwitted slave who was deferential to whites.Sambo52
4657562649The most widespread method slaves used to defy their masters wasEveryday forms of resistance, such as refusing to work hard.53
4657566962By fostering _____, or a sense of kindly protection and security for slaves, whites reduced resistance to slavery.Paternalism54
4657570439One reason that nonslaveholding whites living amid the plantation system accepted slavery was that theyWere often closely related to the wealthier planters who did own slaves55
4657574116Like rice and sugar, ____ did not enjoy widespread success in the South because it could only be grown in limited areas in the coastal regions of the Southeast.Long-staple cotton56
4657575499How did slaves cope with being separated from their families?They could be "adopted" by a slave family in the new community.57
4657579557Typical white southerners were yeoman farmers who owned few or no slaves and were known asPlain folk58
4657580863Which of the following are true about free blacks in the South before the Civil War?1. Some owned slaves 2. Most lived in poverty 3. Free black communities flourished in New Orleans and Charleston.59
4657583751How did most destitute southern whites make their living?They mostly foraged or hunted by were often malnourished60
4657587041More than half of the free African Americans in slaveholding states were living in ____ in 1860s.Virginia and Maryland61
4657588305Which of the following best describes the economic relationship between the North and South during the antebellum period?The South was like a colony, shipping raw goods to the North to be turned into salable goods.62
4657589971From the 1830s on, state laws governing slavery made it much more difficult for owners to set their slaves free, in part becauseNat Turner's revolt had prompted fears of further revolts among white southerners63
4657591375Which of the following best explains why rice did not become a staple of the southern economy?Rice fields require extensive irrigation.64
4657593345Which of the following were the case with the poorest white southerners, referred to by some as "poor white trash"?1. Wealthier whites sometimes called them "clay eaters" 2. They often suffered from dietary deficiencies and disease such as pellagra, hookworm and malaria.65
4657595048Nonslaveholding whites relied on the plantation system for all of the following exceptRented Land66
4657595936How did the shift of slave labor to the cotton states affect planters in the upper South?They began selling their slaves to cotton plantations to compensate for their crops' decline in value67
4657597626Urban slaves often had more freedom than rural slaves because urban slaveswere often hired out to work as day laborers68
4657598816Which of the following best explains why sugar did not become a staple crop in the South?1. Cultivation of sugarcane required backbreaking labor 2. Sugarcane takes a long time to grow 3. Sugarcane growers in the South had to compete with farmers in the Caribbean.69
4657600980The few female "academies" in the South focused on training women to beWives70
4657601635Which of the following best explains how slaves expressed their attitudes toward slavery while the masters were watching?They sang religious songs that often drew upon themes of freedom and salvation.71
4657605785The South was economically dependent on the North because the North provided the raw materials that southerners used to manufacture products.False72
4664770895Why was the work of "factors" so important to southern industry?They provided planters with much needed credit.73
4664770896Which of the following was a primary cause of the South's lack of industrial development?lack of transportation74

Unfinished Nation Chapter 10 Flashcards

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5988560922American Industrial RevolutionReached America by 1800s and boomed after the Civil War (1861-1865). Economy became more based around factory system, improved transportation (Erie Canal) helped reduce movement prices. Increased immigration from Ireland (potato famine) and Germany brought workers and an increased population. Women's rights, higher education, public education, and other ideas of individual rights became more prominent. Groundwork for social commerce came from two important court cases. People felt safer to invest.0
5988560923IndustrializationProcess of industrial development in which countries evolve economically, from producing basic, primary goods to using modern factories for mass-producing goods. At the highest levels of development, national economies are geared mainly toward the delivery of services and exchange of information.1
5988560924Which of the following had a significant impact on U.S. population growth between 1790 and 1840?-a high birth rate. -improvements in public health. -a declining number of epidemics.2
5988560925What were the factors contributing to a slower increase in the African American population than the increase seen in the white population in the early 1800s?-higher death rate. -enforced poverty. -Shorter life expectancy3
5988560926What three trends characterized the American population between 1820 and 1840?-Rapid population increase (4Million in 1790 to 10million in 1820 and 17 million by 1840. -Movement westward -The growth of towns and cities where demand for work was expanding.4
5988560927ImmigrationMovement of individuals into an area occupied by an existing population from another.5
5988560928How many foreign-born people lived in the unites states in 1830 and what was the result of the slow down of immigration?There were fewer than 500,000 foreign-born people in the country at that time. Due to wars within Europe immigration was cut off. An economic crisis in American also had an effect on this.6
5988560929Why did Immigration grow after 1830?-Reduced Transportation costs -Increasing economic opportunities -Deteriorating economic conditions in some part of Europe7
5988560930Cities (Between 1840-1860) the river ports.-Growth accelerated dramatically -NY 312,000 to 805,000 making it the nations largest and most commercially important city. -Philadelphia grew from 220,000 to 565,000 -Boston 93,000-177,000 -26% of the population was living in town, or cities up from 14%8
5988560931Before 1830, _____ had come to serve as the major link between Midwestern farmers and the cities of the Northeast.New Orleans9
5988560932Irish-Construction gangs after 1840 were increasingly composed of workers from -Most were Catholic from the Southern Counties in Ireland -Along with Germans, were the main newcomers after 1850 -Most moved to Eastern Cities where they landed and became part of the unskilled labor force. -Largest group was young, single, women who worked in factories or in domestic service.10
5988560933Germans-Usually arrived with at least some money and often came in family groups. -Generally moved on to the Northwest, where they became farmers or small businessmen.11
5988560934Southexperienced both the smallest amount of urban growth and the least settlement by immigrants between 1840 and 1860?12
5988560935Compare and contrast Irish and German immigrants who arrived in the United States between 1840 and 1860.-By 1860 1.5million Irish-born -By 1860 1 Million German-born13
5988560936What region other than the North East experienced substantial population growth and why?The West due to a booming agricultural economy produced significant urban growth. Communities that were once small villages became major cities. St Louis, Pittsburg, Cincinnati, and Louisville became centers for trade. Trade later moved from the Mississippi River to the Great lakes, creating important port cities such as Buffalo, Detroit, Milwaukie, and Chicago which gradually overtook the river ports.14
5988560937NativistA person who, especially in the United States in the 19th century, favors the interests of established inhabitants over those of immigrants. Arose in the 1840's and 1850's in response to the influx of Irish and German Catholics.15
5988560938Native American Partysecret societies of nativists that agitated against immigration; endorsed a list of demands that included banning Catholics or foreign-born citizens from holding office, more restrictive naturalization laws, and literacy tests for voting (Not Native American)16
5988560939Supreme Order of the Star Spangled BannerDemands included banning Catholics or Aliens from holding public office, enacting more restrictive naturalization laws, and establishing literacy tests for voting.17
5988560940Know-Nothingsa mid-1800s secret anti-immigration fraternal organization; this group later became a political party called the American Party18
5988560941The American Partypolitical organization formed by the Know-Nothings after the 1852 election which had much success in the 1854 elections in the Northeast but not much outside that areas. There strength declined after 1854.19
5988560942Why did the Canal Age come about?Barges didn't provide a way to ship goods directly to the urban markets and ports on the Atlantic Coast. Technology advanced to make them possible.20
5988560943Who paid for construction of canals?The States. NY was repaid its costs of the Erie Canal within 7 years due to tolls and frequent use.21
5988560944Erie CanalA canal between the New York cities of Albany and Buffalo, completed in 1825. The canal, considered a marvel of the modern world at the time, allowed western farmers to ship surplus crops to sell in the North and allowed northern manufacturers to ship finished goods to sell in the West. "Clintons Big Ditch". Contributed to the decline of agriculture in New England which resulted in a reliance on crops from the West.22
5988560945Which states were inspired by the Erie Canal to develop water connections between Lake Erie to the Ohio River?-Indiana. -Ohio.23
5988560946Compare and contrast turnpike transportation and canal transportation.-Turnpike transportation was expensive and could not meet demands. This transportation continued to be utilized mainly for compact and valuable goods. -Canals supplied a cheaper alternative for transporting from the west and south such as wheat, corn from the west and cotton and tobacco from the south.24
5988560947What was the response of Cities along the Atlantic Seaboard who could not easily connect to the canals that were benefiting other cities like NY?Cities such as Boston began to set their sights on alternative modes of transportation and began to work towards a railroad system which was already in progress when canals reached its height.25
5988560948RailroadsEmerged from a combination of technological and entrepreneurial innovations: the invention of tracks, the creation of steam-powered locomotives, and the development of trains as public carriers of passengers and freight. Railroad played a small role in the nations transportation system in the 1820's and 1830's but railroad pioneers laid the groundwork in those years for the great surge of railroad building in the midcentury. Railroads eventually became the primary transportation system for the United States, as well as critical sites of development for innovations in technology and corporate organization. Were essential to westward expansion because they made it easier to travel to and live in the west.26
5988560949John StevensIn 1820 ran a locomotive and cars around a circular track on his New Jersey estate.27
5988560950Stockton & DarlingtonIn England became the first line to carry general traffic in 1825.28
5988560951Baltimore and OhioBecame the first company to begin actual operations, opening a thirteen mile stretch of track in 1830. American entrepreneurs quickly grew interested in the English experiment.29
5988560952New York, the Mohawk and Hudson1831 began running trains sixteen miles between Add to Schenectady and Albany.30
5988560953How were railroads funded?Some came from private sources but most funds were from federal funding; federal, state and local. Federal land grants gave 30 million acres to 11 states to assist in railroad construction.31
5988560954Railroads effects on the segregation of the SouthRailroads diverted traffic away from the main water routes lessening the Wests dependence on the Mississippi and helped further weaken the connection between the Northwest and the South.32
5988560955Railroads effects on Settlements and businessWhere Railroads went, towns, ranches, and farms grew up rapidly along their routes. Areas once cut off from markets during winter found that the railroad could transport goods to and from them year round. Railroads also decreased the time to travel. A trip that once took three weeks by canal, now only tool 2-3 days by train.33
5988560956Samuel F.B. MorseInvented the telegraph and invented morse code, pioneer in the telegraph, first way people could mass communicate quickly, use the code to communicate34
5988560957The TelegraphBefore the telegraph all communication occurred in person or through the mail. While transportation improvements made the mail quicker, it did not assist railroads with coordinating train scheduled so different forms of communication were researched. Technology did not yet exist to transmit voices so electricity was used to send codes along electric cables in the forms of pulses, mores code was created to form a way to read and translate these pulses into a written language. The first successful use of Morse Code was in 1860 when the nomination of James K. Polk was communicated over the wires. By 1860, more that 50,000 miles of wire connected most parts of the country. The telegraph also spread quickly across Europe and in 1866, the first transatlantic cable was laid, allowing communication between Europe and America.35
5988560958Western UnionAn American financial services and communications company founded in 1851; as an industrialized monopoly, it dominated the telegraph industry in the late 19th century.; it was the first communications empire and set a pattern for American-style communications businesses as they are known today.36
5988560959Associated PressFounded in 1848,Allows media outlets to buy stories, do not have to send reporters to every major city, able to offer readers more recent news, stories are pretty unbiased because trying to appeal to many media outlets and sell as many stories as possible,37
5988560960Richard HoeIn 1846, he invented the steam cylinder rotary press, making it possible to print newspapers much more rapidly and cheaply than had been possible in the past. Also, the rotary press spurred the dramatic growth of mass- circulation newspapers.38
5988560961News PapersThe rotary press spurred the growth of mass-circulation newspapers. The New York Sun, the most widely circulated paper in the nation, had 8,000 readers in 1834. The New York Herald had a circulation of 77,000.39
5988560962CorporationsThe removal of some legal obstacles in 1830 led to a spurt in the growth of corporations. Ownership of a corporation is held by individuals who own shares of corporation's stock. Individual shareholders are not responsible for the actions of the corporation-just lose initial investment. Employees cannot be prosecuted for the acts of the corporation at large. Attract solid managers, manipulate/influences govt policy to suit their ends.40
5988560963Limited liabilityA form of business ownership in which the owners are liable only up to the amount of their individual investments. This along with the formation of Corporations made possible much larger manufacturing and business enterprises.41
5988560964Factory systemA method of production that brought many workers and machines together into one building. Before the War of 1812, most manufacturing took place within house holds or in small workshops. New England textile manufacturers began using new water powered machines that allowed them to bring their operations together under a single roof. Between 1840 and 1860, American industry experienced a dramatic growth and for the first time the value of manufactured goods was roughly equal to that of agricultural products. More than half of the 140,000 manufacturing establishments were located in the northeast therefore the northeast produced more than two-thirds of the manufactured goods and employed nearly three quarters of the men and women working in manufacturing.42
5988560965Machine ToolsTools used to make machinery parts. The government supported much of the research and development of machine tools, often in connection with supplying the military. One example is an armory in Springfield Mass which which developed two important tools, the turret lath (Used for cutting screws and other metal parts), and the universal milling machine(Replaced hand chiseling of complicated parts and dies). By the 1840's, the machine tools used in the factories of the Northeast were already better than those in most European factories.43
5988560966Precision GrinderWas critical to, among other things, the construction of sewing machines but was designed in the 1850's to help the army produce standardized riffle parts.44
5988560967Interchangeable PartsParts that spread across many industries. Revolutionized watch and clock making, the manufacturing of locomotives, the creation of steam engines, and the making of many farm tools.45
5988560968CoalWhich of the following was replacing wood as a leading energy source in the mid-nineteenth century? Coal made it possible for factories to locate themselves away from running streams permitting the wider expansion of the industry. Most mined around Pittsburg in Western Pennsylvania. Leaped from 50,000 tons in 1820 to 14 million tons in 1860.46
5988560969Great Industrial advances in the owed to much to American Inventors.In 1830, the number of inventions patented was 544; in 1860, it stood at 4,778.47
5988560970Charles GoodyearAn American inventor discovered in 1839 by mixing sulfur and rubber in a process called vulcanizing, he could "cure" rubber and make it more elastic and usable.48
5988560971Elias Howe & Isaac SingerHowe invented the sewing machine, which was perfected by Singer; gave another boost to northern industrialization, specifically the read made clothing industry49
5988560972Decline in Trade in The 1840'sWhile merchant capitalist remained figures of importance in the 1840's in such cities as New York, Philadelphia and Boston, merchant capitalism was declining in part because British competitors were stealing much of America's export trade, but mostly because there were greater opportunities for profit in manufacturing than in trade. That is one reason why industries developed first in the Northeast: an affluent merchant class with the money and the will to finance them already existed there. Industrial capitalists soon became the new aristocrats of the Northeast, with far reaching economic and political influence.50
5988560973Which of these correctly describe the difficulties in recruiting factory workers in the early days of industrial development?-Many city dwellers were skilled artisans who worked in their own shops. -90% of Americans still lived and worked on farms. -Available unskilled workers were not numerous enough to meet industry's needs.51
5988560974Two Systems of enlistment that existed to fill labor needs-Common in the mid-Atlantic states, brought whole families from the farm to work together in the mill. -Another system popular in Massachusetts, enlisted young women, mostly farmers daughters in there late teens and early twenties. Known as the Lowell or Waltham System.52
5988560975Lowell SystemDeveloped in the textile mills of Lowell, Massachusetts, in the 1820s, in these factories as much machinery as possible was used, so that few skilled workers were needed in the process, and the workers were almost all single young farm women, who worked for a few years and then returned home to be housewives. Managers found these young women were the perfect workers for this type of factory life.53
5988560976Factory Girls AssociationIn 1834, mill workers in Lowell organized a union known as this, which staged a strike to protest a 25 percent wage cut. Two years later the association struck again, against a rent increase in boardinghouses. Both Strikes failed, and a recession in 1837 nearly killed the organization.54
5988560977Sarah bagleyorganized the Lowell Female Labor Reform Association in the 1849s. The group petitoned for the state legislature that there was a 10 hours workday, and for improvement in conditions within the mills.55
5988560978The Paternalistic factory SystemAs competition in the domestic textile industry increased and wages subsequently fell, strikes began to occur, and with the introduction of cheaper imported foreign workers by mid-century, the system proved unprofitable and declined.56
5988560979How did American workers respond to rapid changes in the workplace? Why were their efforts at union organization relatively ineffective?Americans workers attempted to unionize and fight for fair wages, good work conditions and fair treatment. The efforts to unionize were thwarted as factories began to move towards a cheaper source of workers, immigrants. Immigrants after 1840 were growing in numbers and their unfamiliarity with their new country had even less leverage than the women they had displaced and therefore they often experienced far worse work conditions.57
5988560980National Trades UnionOrganization of skilled workers founded in 1834. It was an association of trade groups, would you join together to achieve better. wages and working conditions forward to members. Group comprised of printers, and cordwainers (makers of high quality shoes and boots). Hostile laws and courts handicapped the unions, as did the panic of 1837 and the depression that followed.58
5988560981Commonwealth vs Hunta landmark ruling of the ma supreme court establishing the legality of labor unions and the legality of union workers striking if an employer hired non-union workers. case heard by the massachusetts supreme court. the case was the first judgement in the u.s. that recognized that the conspiracy law is inapplicable to unions and that strikes for a closed shop are legal. also decided that unions are not responsible for the illegal acts of their members.59
5988560982Central Parkconstruction started in the 1850's, partly at the request of New York's wealthy, as a place to ride their elegant carriages.60
5988560983PaupersGenuinely destitute people in growing urban centers. The people were almost entirely without resources, often homeless, and dependent on charity or crime, or both for survival. Often starved to death or dies of exposure. Many were recent immigrants, some were widows, and orphans stripped of the family structures that allowed most working class Americans to survive. Some were people suffering from alcoholism or mental illness. Many were victims of native prejudice barred from working the most menial tasks based on race. Worst victims in the North were free blacks.61
5988560984Middle-class homes were categorized by these traits.Crowded, even cluttered rooms, dark colors, lush fabrics, and heavy furniture and draperies.62
5988560985What factors contributed to limiting overt class conflict?-Some workers were able to move from poverty to riches. -Life was better for most factory workers than it had been on the farms or in Europe. -The rootlessness of migrant urban laborers made organization and protest difficult.63
5988560986How did the nature of families change after industrialization.-Families moved from farms to urban areas. -Sons and daughters were more likely to leave the family on search of jobs than they had in the rural areas. -Due to the income earner leaving the home, distinctions began to develop. The world of the family was now dominated not by production but housekeeping, child rearing, and other primarily domestic concerns. -There was also a significant decrease in the birth rate.64
5988560987Cult of Domesticitythe ideal woman was seen as a tender, self-sacrificing caregiver who provided a nest for her children and a peaceful refuge for her husband, social customs that restricted women to caring for the house65
5988560988With growing distinctions between the role of men and women only one school offered education to both men and women.Oberlin School -The Mount Holyoke in Mass was founded by Mary Lyon as an academy for women.66
5988560989Public SphereAn area in social life where individuals can come together to freely discuss and identify societal problems, and through that discussion influence political action67
5988560990Private SphereRefers to areas of life, such as the family, that are thought, in classical liberalism, to be separate from political influence and interference.68
5988560991HolidaysTook on a special importance not just as expressions of patriotism, but a way of enjoying one of the few nonreligious holidays from work available to most Americans.69
5988560992Leisure ActivitiesScarce for all but the wealthiest Americans. Most people worked long hours and vacations were rare. For most people, Sunday was a the only respite from work, and Sundays were generally reserved for religion and rest.70
5988560993Minstrel ShowsThe minstrel show, or minstrelsy, was an American entertainment consisting of comic skits, variety acts, dancing, and music, performed by white people in blackface or, especially after the Civil War, black people in blackface. Minstrel shows lampooned black people as dim-witted, lazy, buffoonish, superstitious, happy-go-lucky, and musical.71
5988560994The American Museum in New YorkOpened by P.T. Barnum in 1842. Was a "freak show".72
5988560995P.T. BarnumA genius in publicizing his ventures with garish posters and elaborate news paper announcements. In 1870's he launched the famous circus for which he is best remembered.73
5988560996LecturesSpoke of advances in science, described visits to exotic places, provided vivid historical narratives, or railed against the evils of alcohol or slavery. Was one of the most popular forms of entertainment in the 19th century.74
5988560997How did farmers in the Northeast respond to agricultural competition from the new, richer soil of the Northwest?-Farmers moved to towns and became laborers. -Farmers moved west and settled new land. -Farmers changed their focus to supplying food to nearby cities.75
5988560998What new agricultural techniques and technologies improved farm production in the Northwest?-cultivation of hardier varieties of seed. -automatic thresher. -automatic reaper. -John Deere steel plows which were more durable than those made of iron.76
5988560999Automatic ReaperInvented by Cyrus McCormick an Hussey who fought over the final design. A mechanical reaper or reaping machine is a mechanical, semi-automated device that harvests crops. Mechanical reapers are an important part of mechanized agriculture and a main feature of agricultural productivity.77
5988561000Rural Lifegreatly different from urban life, focused on church, religious gatherings and social events, most people were fairly isolated78
5988561001cult of domesticityThe cult of domesticity, also known as the cult of true womanhood (by people who like it), is a view about women in the 1800s. They believed that women should stay at home and should not do any work outside of the home. There were four things they believed that women should be: More religious than men.79

The Unfinished Nation, Chapter 9 Flashcards

Terms : Hide Images
5686827202A compromise drafted by __________ __________ brought the nullification crisis to an end.Henry Clay0
5686827203After John __________ died in 1835, President Jackson appointed Roger B. Taney to take his place.Marshall1
5686827205By 1828, presidential electors were elected by _____ in every state except South Carolina.popular vote2
5686827206By embracing the philosophy of the __________ system, the Jackson administration established elected officials' right to appoint their followers to public office.spoils3
5686827207Drawing from the ideas of _____, John C. Calhoun argued that the states were the final arbiters of the constitutionality of federal laws.Madison and Jefferson4
5686827208Henry Clay and Daniel Webster persuaded Nicholas Biddle to apply to Congress for renewal of the Bank of the United States' charter because it would-make the Bank a major issue in the national election. -force a congressional vote.5
5686827210In 1830, Massachusetts Senator Daniel__________ challenged Senator Robert Y. Hayne to a debate about states' rights versus national power.Webster6
5686827211In 1832, the Democrats became the first major American party to hold anational convention.7
5686827212In 1836, a "distribution" act required the federal government to pay its surplus funds to thestates.8
5686827213In developing his theory of __________, John C. Calhoun believed he was offering a moderate alternative to secession.nullification9
5686827216In the spring of 1842, Secretary of State Daniel Webster and Lord Ashburton-agreed that the United States would receive slightly more than half of the disputed border territory. -reached some resolution on the Caroline and Creole Incidents. -established a revised northern boundary as far west as the Rocky Mountains.10
5686827217Jackson was consistently opposed to concentration of power in the federal government overeconomics and banking.11
5686827218Presidents prior to Jackson viewed the Indians asnoble savages.12
5686827219Martin Van Buren argued that a strong national party is essential fordemocracy.13
5686827220Of the Five Civilized Tribes, only the __________ and the __________ managed to partially aviod forced relocation.Seminole, Cherokee.14
5686827222The central issue of the 1832 elections was the _____, which was exactly what _____ wanted.Bank of the United States; Henry Clay15
5686827223The election of Andrew Jackson as president in 1828 was historically significant because it-legitimized the idea of political parties as popular, democratic institutions. -was the result of a popular movement, not simply the work of political elites.16
5686827224The first issue of the New York Sun on September 3, 1833, marked the introduction of the "__________ __________," which inaugurated a new age in American Journalism.penny press17
5686827225The Locofocos were-a radical faction of the Democratic Party in the 1830s. -in favor of vigorous, perhaps even violent, action. -mainly workingmen, small businessmen, and professionals in the Northeast.18
5686827226The outcome of the 1836 presidential election was partly the result of a nationwideeconomic boom.19
5686827227The route the Cherokees took on their removal from Georgia is now commonly known as the Trailof Tears20
5686827228The three leading figures in the Whig Party became known as the "__________ __________."Great Triumvirate21
5686827229Though he had won election as New York governor in 1828, __________ __________ __________ resigned when Andrew Jackson appointed him secretary of state.Martin Van Buren22
5686827230What significant lesson did the resolution of the nullification crisis demonstrate?No state could defy the federal government alone.23
5686827231When the Jackson administration began transferring funds from the Bank of the United States to state banks, Nicholas Biddle responded bycalling in loans and raising interest rates.24
5686827232Which of the following accurately describe Indian and white relations before the mid-nineteenth century?-Whites were at least somewhat aware of Indians' claims to the land. -Interactions were sometimes, but not usually, unfriendly. -The two groups lived in close proximity to one another.25
5686827233Which of the following accurately describe President Jackson's views on the Maysville Road Bill?-It was unconstitutional because the road was located entirely in Kentucky. -It was unwise because it committed the federal government to large expenditures.26
5686827234Which of the following best describes Andrew Jackson's view of Indians?He was deeply hostile toward them and wanted them to move west.27
5686827235Which of the following best describe the soft-money opponents to the Bank of the United States?-They thought the Bank restrained state banks from freely issuing notes. -They were mostly state bankers and their allies.28
5686827236Which of the following best describes Americans who qualified to vote prior to the 1820s?white property owners29
5686827237Which of the following best describes the 1836 presidential election?Democrats united behind Martin Van Buren.30
5686827238Which of the following best describes the significance of the Whigs' attacks on Jackson and Van Buren for their association with the Freemasons?By accusing Democrats of association with the undemocratic Freemasons, the Whigs beat them with their own issue.31
5686827239Which of the following changed most during the "age of Jackson"?the American electorate32
5686827240Which of the following did Martin Van Buren emphasize?-the party's need for a permanent opposition. -party loyalty and preservation of the party.33
5686827241Which of the following did the results of the 1836 presidential election illustrate?-the Whigs' inability to find a single strong candidate. -the continuing strength of Jackson within the Democratic Party. -the Whigs' problem of divided leadership.34
5686827242Which of the following emerged as the core concerns of the Webster-Hayne debate?-nullification. -preservation of the Union. -states' rights.35
5686827243Which of the following groups was not a strong supporter of the Whigs?small farmers in the West who had migrated from the South36
5686827244Which of the following groups were strong supporters of the Democrats in the 1830s?-southern planters suspicious of industrial growth. -smaller merchants and workingmen in the Northeast. -westerners who had roots in the South.37
5686827245Which of the following sparked the nullification crisis of 1832?a state convention vote on the "tariff of abominations"38
5686827246Which of the following statements about Indian removal is not correct?Had the federal government employed scientific study and planning, white expansion into the West could have been controlled.39
5686827247Which of the following statements about people and events that surrounded President Harrison's inauguration is not correct?John Tyler looked to guidance from Whig Party leaders after Harrison died.40
5686827248Which of the following statements about the 1840 presidential election is not correct?It presented a stark contrast between aristocratic Van Buren and honest, man-of-the-people Harrison.41
5686827249Which of the following statements regarding actions by the Jackson administration against the Bank of the United States in 1833 is not correct?Jackson recognized that he had the legal means to abolish the Bank, but he needed the help of a reliable treasury secretary.42
5686827250Which of the following was not one of the "Five Civilized Tribes"?Fox43
5686827251Which of the following were beliefs held by a large portion of the Democratic Party in the 1830s?-The Union should be defended. -The role of the government should be limited. -The government should help remove obstacles to opportunity.44
5686827252With the emergence of the Whigs, the era know to scholars as the "__________ __________ system" had begun.second party45

The Unfinished Nation Chapter 8 Flashcards

Key Terms (with significance)

Terms : Hide Images
5652707027Adams-Onís TreatySpain ceded all of Florida to the US and gave up claim to territory north of the 42nd parallel in Pacific Northwest. American govt gave up claims to Texas--for a time.0
5652707028Missouri CompromiseCombined Maine and Missouri proposals into a single bill; Maine would be free and Missouri a slave state. Happy resolution of a danger to the Union.1
5652707029McCulloch vs Maryland1819 Marshall confirmed "implied powers" of Congress by upholding the constitutionality of the Bank of US. Unpopular in the South/West - states tried to drive out of business. States taxing could lead to them taxing it to death.2
5652707030Worcester vs GeorgiaGeorgia tried to regulate access to Cherokee country. Marshall invalidated law, and only federal gov't had authority (empowered tribe like states but under federal rule)3
5652707031"Monroe Doctrine"1823 JQA wrote Europe to stay out of LA - could not enforce, but British could. It was important to trade with America. Recognized country's independence4
5652707032Andrew JacksonCommanded American troops along Florida... invaded and seized Spanish forts at St. Marks and Pensacola (Seminole War). Demonstrated that US could easily take Florida by force5
5652707033Second Bank of the United States1816: More capital and couldn't forbid state banks from issuing notes, but its size and power enabled it to compel state banks to issue only sound notes, or risk being forced out of business.6
5652707034Protective TariffEnd of war dimmed prospects for an industry. Congress passed a tariff law to limit competition from abroad (cotton cloth).7
5652707035John Jacob Astor, America Fur Co.After War of 1812, JJAF Co extended operations from Great Lakes westward to Rockies. Trappers increased and mountain men closely bound up with market economy, which bulk of profits flowed to merchants, not trappers.8
5652707036"Era of Good Feelings"Expansion of economy, growth of white settlement and trade in West, and creation of states all reflected rising spirit of nationalism.9
5652707037James MonroeDecline of Federalists and no important international threats, so Monroe attempted to end partisan divisions and factional disputes.10
5652707038John Quincy AdamsGreat diplomat and committed nationalist - promoted American expansion. Secretary of state, Adams began negotiations with Spain over Florida.11
5652707039Dartmouth College vs Woodward1819 Further expanded contract clause of Constitution. Republicans tried to revise Dart C's charter to convert from private to state uni. Daniel Webster argued... placed important restrictions on the ability of state govt's to control corporations.12
5652707040Gibbons vs OgdenCourt strengthened Congress' power to regulate commerce. Important issue was whether Congress' power to give Gibbons a license superseded NY's power to grant Odgen monopoly. Increased federal role in promoting economic growth and protected corporations from local govt interference.13
5652707041"Corrupt Bargain"Election of 1824: none of the candidates were able to secure a majority of the electoral vote = put the outcome in the hands of the House of Reps, which elected John Quincy Adams over rival Andrew Jackson. Henry Clay was the Speaker of the House at the time, and he convinced Congress to elect Adams = Adams made Clay Secretary of State.14
5652707042"Tariff of Abominations"Manufactured goods protected and (in South) raw materials cost more. When Adams signed, the South was angered15
5652707043John C. Calhounresigned Vice Presidency to fight against "Tariff of Abominations", wrote South Carolina Exposition on Nullification16
5652707044South Carolina Exposition on NullificationClaimed that a majority of states could nullify a federal law. Additionally, if a majority did not vote nullify that any state that did vote to nullify could exit the union.17
5652707045Force Bill1833: Authorized President Jackson to use the army and navy to collect duties on the Tariffs of 1828 & 1832. South Carolina's ordinance of nullification had declared these tariffs null and void, and South Carolina would not collect duties on them. The Force Act was never invoked because it was passed by Congress the same day as the Compromise Tariff of 1833, so it became unnecessary. South Carolina also nullified the Force Act.18
5652707046John Jacob AstorCreated one of the largest fur businesses, the American Fur Company. He bought skins from western fur traders and trappers who became known as mountain men. Astoria was named after him.19
5652707047American Fur CompanyFounded by John Jacob Astor in 1808; grew to monopolize the fur trade in the United States by 1830, and became one of the largest businesses in the country; worked south of the Columbia River in Oregon20
5652707048Seminole WarFor 7 years the Seminole Indians, joined by runaway black slaves, waged a bitter guerrilla war that took the lives of some 1500. Their spirit was broken in 1837, when the American field commander treacherously seized their leader, Osceola, under the flag of truce. The war dragged on for 5 more years, but the Seminole were defeated.21
5652707049Henry ClaySenator who persuaded Congress to accept the Missouri Compromise, which admitted Maine into the Union as a free state, and Missouri as a slave state, also developed the "American System"22
5652707050Gibbons vs Ogden(JMon) interstate commerce, In this Marshall Court case, the U.S. Supreme Court invalidated a state monopoly and reaffirmed Congress' power to oversee commerce between states. Of all the cases that have interpreted the scope of congressional power under the commerce clause, none has been more important than this23
5652707051Monroe Doctrine1823 - Declared that Europe should not interfere in the affairs of the Western Hemisphere and that any attempt at interference by a European power would be seen as a threat to the U.S. It also declared that a New World colony which has gained independence may not be recolonized by Europe.24
5652707052Cherokee Nation vs GeorgiaMarshall ruled that the Cherokee had "an unquestionable right" to their lands, but they were "not a foreign state, in the sense of the Constitution" but rather a "domestic, dependent nation" and so could not sue in a United States court over Georgia's voiding their right to self-rule. Was a blow to the Cherokee case, it cast doubt on the constitutionality of Indian Removal Act25

The Unfinished Nation Chapter 7 - Jeffersonian Era Flashcards

Some key terms and things mentioned in the "Unfinished Nation" textbook chapter 7.

Some of the terms are ones that Patrick_Campbell385 originally did, just wanted to give him credit.

Terms : Hide Images
7960566584Judith Sargent MurrayIn 1784, this woman published an essay defending the right of women to education0
7960566585Decline of midwiferyThe medical profession used its newfound commitment to the "scientific" method to justify expanding its control over kinds of care that have traditionally been outside its domain; this caused a decline in what?1
7960709684Noah Webster"As soon as he opens his lips, he should rehearse the history of his own country; he should lisp the praise of liberty, and of those illustrious heroes and statesmen who have wrought a revolution in her favor." This is a quote by whom?2
7960566586Noah WebsterWho was the author of widely used American spellers and dictionaries?3
7960726569Charles Brockden BrownThis Philadelphia writer was among the most ambitious of the growing number of writers working to create a strong American literature.4
7960566587DeismWhat is the theology that attracted such educated Americans such as Jefferson and Benjamin Franklin, who accepted the existence of God but considered him a remote "watchmaker", who, after having created the universe, had withdrawn from direct involvement with the human race and its sins5
7960566588The second great awakeningThe origins of the ____________________________ lay in the efforts of conservative theologians to fight the spread of religious nationalism and of church establishments.6
7960923677that individuals must readmit God and Christ into their daily lives. They must embrace a fervent, active piety, and they must reject the skeptical rationalism that threatened traditional beliefs.What was the basic message of the Second Great Awakening?7
7960844379Methodist; BaptistWhat became the fastest growing denomination in the Second Great Awakening? Which denomination was almost as successful and found especially fervent following in the South?8
7960566589Cane ridgeAt this place in Kentucky in the summer of 1801, a group of evangelical minister's presided over the nation's first "camp meeting" and extraordinary revival that lasted several days, had approximately 25,000 people9
7960566590Handsome lakeThe most important revivalist among Native Americans, had a miraculous "rebirth" after years of alcoholism10
7974784871Cotton ginWhat invention in 1793 expanded African American slavery in the US?11
7974796464Eli WhitneyWho invented the cotton gin?12
7960566591Cotton ginIn 1793 Eli Whitney invented a machine that performed the arduous task of removing the seeds from short-staple cotton quickly and efficiently13
7974831965tobaccoAfrican American slavery was dwindling for a time due to the decline of ____________ production, until the invention of the cotton gin which began to expand African American slavery once again14
7960566593InterchangeabilityWhat concept did Eli Whitney help introduce that involved making machine tools that could manufacture components of the cotton gin (and later guns for the government) so that farmers could repair machines themselves?15
7960566594Robert FultonA major advance in steam-powered transportation, the steamboat, was invented by whom?16
7974984535ClermontWhat was the name of Robert Fulton's steamboat, that Robert R. Livingston helped promote?17
7975018173a toll road running 60 miles from Philadelphia to Lancaster, PennsylvaniaThe laying of what turnpike in 1794 started the "turnpike era"? (Or more specifically, where was it?)18
7975159380Horse racingWhat activity/sport in America began formally in 1665 and grew in popularity over time and in its beginnings included many blacks and was prominent in Kentucky?19
7975294196Secretary of Treasury, Albert Gallatin drastically reduced government spending, Jefferson scaled down the armed forces (but established the United States Military Academy at West Point)The Jefferson administration moved deliberately to reverse the trends of of previous administrations' extravagant expenditures, what are two ways they did this?20
7975329684abolish all internal taxes, leaving customs duties and the sale of western lands as the only sources of revenue for the governmentWhat did Thomas Jefferson persuade Congress to do in 1802?21
7975362738ended the payment of tribute to Tripoli and paid a substantial ransom for the release of American prisonersIn 1805, the pasha of Tripoli, unhappy with American responses to his demands, ordered the flagpole of the American consulate chopped down-a symbolic declaration of war. In 1805, Jefferson agreed to terms by which the United States ___________________________________________________ and ____________________________________________________.22
7960566595Marbury vs. MadisonIn which important case did the justices repudiate a relatively minor power (the power to force the delivery of commission), but asserted a vastly greater one (the power to nullify an act of congress)?23
7960566596John MarshallWho was the Chief Justice of the U.S. appointed by Adams that established the judiciary as a coequal branch of government with the executive and the legislature?24
7960566597New OrleansWhat city lies at the mouth of the Mississippi River?25
7975602839American ships sailing the Mississippi River from depositing their cargoes in New Orleans for transfer to oceangoing vehicles.Jefferson was alarmed when, in the fall of 1802, he learned that the Spanish intendant at New Orleans announced a new regulation that forbade what?26
7960566598Lewis and ClarkThe two important leaders that explored the west27
7975642444April 30, 1803When was the Louisiana Purchase signed, which granted to America all of the Louisiana territory for the sum of 80 million francs ($15 million)?28
7975665597NoWere the boundaries of the Louisiana purchase clearly defined?29
7975682181March 4, 1801 - March 4, 1809 (election of 1800 through to election of 1808)What were the years of Thomas Jefferson's presidency?30
7960566599secessionIn response to Jefferson's buying of the Louisiana Purchase, the most extreme federalists, the Essex Junto, concluded that the only recourse for New England was what?31
7980505629BurrAarón Burr challenged Alexander Hamilton to a duel after Hamilton won the election for governor of New York in 1804. Who won?32
7960566600Chesapeake-leopard incidentWhat was the famous impressment incident in which the British ship Leopard hailed American ship Chesapeake, and when the American commander James Barron refused to allow the British to search the ship, the Leopard opened fire. Barron had to surrender and 4 Americans were dragged off.33
7960566601Embargo actAct by Jefferson that prohibited all exports from american ports34
7980671741"Peaceable Coercion"What did Jefferson refer to the embargo act as?35
7960566602William Henry HarrisonMan who was largely responsible for the passage in 1800 of the so-called Harrison land law, which enabled white settlers to acquire farms from the public domain on much easier terms than before36
7960566603Assimilation ProposalJefferson offered the Indians a choice: they could convert them selves into settled farmers and become a part of white society, or they would migrate west of the Mississippi. This choice was called the _____________ _____________.37
7960566604TenskwatawaWho was a charismatic religious leader and a orator known as "the prophet" who has experienced in a mystical awakening in the process of recovering from alcoholism?38
7960566605The Tecumseh confederacyBeginning in 1809 the brother of Tenskwatawa set out to unite all the tribes of the Mississippi Valley into what became known as the ______________________ ______________________.39
7960566606Battle of TippacanoeGovernor Harrison saw a chance to destroy the growing influence of the two Indian leaders, with one thousand soldiers he camped near Prophetstown. On November 7, 1811 he provoked an armed conflict that became labeled/known as the battle of _______________.40
7981335579War HawksThe name of s group of determined, young congressman who desired War to annex all of Florida to the United States41
7981335580Battle of the Thames; William Henry Harrison; October 5, 1813What battle resulted in the death of Tecumseh? Who was the American's leader and when was it?42
7989038248August 24, 1814A British armada sailed up the Patuxent River from Chesapeake Bay and landed an army that marched to nearby Bladensburg, on the outskirts of Washington, where it dispersed a poorly trained force of American militiamen. On what date did the British troops then enter Washington and set several public buildings, including the White house, on fire.43
7989058237Fort McHenryFrancis Scott key wrote the Star Spangled Banner in the night while he witnessed the bombing of what fort?44
7989074014Battle of New OrleansWhat battle did Andrew Jackson fight (and win) several weeks after the war of 1812 officially ended?45
7989104524Daniel WebsterFederal opposition to both the war (of 1812) and the Republicans was led by a young congressman from new Hampshire named __________ ____________.46
7989157854Hartford, Connecticut (This was known as the Hartford Convention)Delegates from the New England states met in what city to discuss their grievances against the Madison administration, hinting at secession and reasserting the right to nullification and proposed seven amendments to the Constitution to protect New England from the growing influence of the South and of the West47
7989203626Christmas Eve, 1814.The Treaty of Ghent, which ended the fighting between America and England/Great Britain in the War of 1812, was signed on what day?48
7989229654the disarmament on the Great Lakes; leading to the the Canadian-American boundary being the longest "unguarded frontier" in the worldWhat did the Rush-Bagot agreement of 1817 provide for?49
7989252943Tecumseh was dead. The British were gone from the Northwest. The intertribal alliance of Tecumseh and the Prophet had collapsed. The end of the war spurred a new white movement westward, the Native Americans were less able than ever to defend their landWhat were reasons that the conflict between Britain and America in the War of 1812 was disastrous for Native Americans?50

AP English Literature Terms Flashcards

sources of definitions are The Princeton Review (TPR) and Barron's AP study guides. and class notes that Mr. Enns distributed :)

Terms : Hide Images
6442497532abstractan abbreviated synopsis of a longer work of scholarship or research0
6442497533adagea saying/proverb containing a truth based on experience and often couched in metaphorical language1
6442497534allegorya story in which the narrative/characters carry an underlying symbolic, metaphorical or possibly an ethical meaning2
6442497535alliterationthe repetition of one or more initial consonant in a group of words or lines of poetry or prose. writers use this for ornament or for emphasis3
6442497536allusiona reference to a person, place, or event meant to create an effect or enhance the meaning of an idea4
6442497537ambiguitya vagueness of meaning; a conscious lack of clarity meant to evoke multiple meanings and interpretation5
6442497538anachronisma person, scene, event, or other element in literature that fails to correspond with the time/era in which the work is set6
6442497539analogya comparison that points out similarities between two dissimilar things7
6442497540annotationa brief explanation,summary, or evaluation of a text or work of literature8
6442497541antagonista character or force in a work of literature that, by opposing the protagonist produces tension or conflict9
6442497542antithesisa rhetorical opposition or contrast of ideas by means of a grammatical arrangement of words, clauses, or sentences10
6442497543aphorisma short, pithy statement of a generally accepted truth or sentiment11
6442497544Apollonianin contrast to Dionysian, it refers to the most noble, godlike qualities of human nature and behavior12
6442497545apostrophea locution that addresses a person/personified thing not present13
6442497546archetypean abstract or ideal conception of a type; a perfectly typical example; an original model/form14
6442497547assonancethe repetition of two or more vowel sounds in a group of words or lines in poetry and prose15
6442497548ballada simple narrative verse that tells a story that is sung or recited; a long narrative poem, usually in very regular meter and rhyme, typically has a naive folksy quality16
6442497549barda poet, in olden times, a performer who told heroic stories to musical accompaniment17
6442497550bathosthe use of insincere or overdone sentimentality18
6442497551belle-lettresthe French term for the world of books, criticism, and literature in general19
6442497552bibliographya list of works cited or otherwise relevant to a subject or other work20
6442497553Bildungsromana German word referring to a novel structured as a series of events that take place as the hero travels in quest of a goal21
6442497554blank versepoetry written in iambic pentameter, the primary meter used in English poetry and the works of Shakespeare and Milton. its lines generally do not rhyme22
6442497555bombastinflated, pretentious language used for trivial subjects23
6442497556burlesquea work of literature meant to ridicule a subject; a grotesque imitation; a broad parody and exaggerates it into ridiculousness24
6442497557cacophonygrating, inharmonious sounds25
6442497558caesuraa pause somewhere in the middle of a verse, often (but not always marked by punctuation)26
6442497559canonthe works considered most important in national literature or period; works widely read and studied27
6442497560caricaturea grotesque likeness of striking qualities in persons and things; a portrait that exaggerates a facet of personality28
6442497561carpe diem"seize the day"29
6442497562catharsisa cleansing of the spirit brought about by the pity and terror of a dramatic tragedy30
6442497563classica highly regarded work of literature or other art form that has withstood the test of time, similar to canon31
6442497564classicismderiving from the orderly qualities of ancient Greek and Roman culture; implies formality, objectivity, simplicity and restraint32
6442497565climaxthe high point, or turning point, of a story/play33
6442497566novela tale in which a young protagonist experiences an introduction to adulthood. the character may develop understanding via disillusionment, education, doses of reality, or any other experiences that alter his/her emotional/intellectual maturity. e.g. Invisible Man34
6442497567conceita witty or ingenious thought; a diverting or highly fanciful idea, often stated in figurative language; a startling or unusual metaphor, or a metaphor developed and expanded upon several lines35
6442497568anticlimaxthis occurs when an action produces far smaller results than one had been led to expect, it is frequently comic in effect36
6442497569antiheroa protagonist who is markedly unheroic: morally weak, cowardly, dishonest, or any number of other unsavory qualities37
6442497570asidea speech (usually just a short comment) made by an actor to the audience, as though momentarily stepping outside of the action on stage38
6442497571aspecta trait of characteristic, as in "an aspect of the dew drop"39
6442497572atmospherethe emotional tone or background that surrounds a scene40
6442497573black humorthis is the use of disturbing themes in comedy. e.g. two tramps comically debating over which should commit suicide first, and whether the branches of a tree will support their weight41
6442497574cadencethe beat or rhythm of poetry in a general sense42
6442497575cantois a divider in long poems, much like chapters in a novel43
6442497576coinagea.k.a. neologism, inventing a word44
6442497577colloquialismthis is a word or phrase used in everyday conversational English that isn't a part of accepted "schoolbook" English45
6442497578controlling imagewhen an image dominates and shapes the entire work46
6442497579metaphysical conceita type of conceit that occurs only in metaphysical poetry47
6442497580connotationthe suggest or implied meaning of a word/phrase48
6442497581consonancethe repetition of two or more consonant sounds within a group of words or a line of poetry49
6442497582coupleta pair of lines that end in rhyme50
6442497583heroic couplettwo rhyming lines in iambic pentameter are called this51
6442497584denotationthe literal, dictionary definition of a word52
6442497585denouementthe resolution that occurs at the end of a play or work or fiction53
6442497586deus ex machinain literature, the use of an artificial device or gimmick to solve a problem54
6442497587Dionysianas distinguished from Apollonian, the word refers to sensual, pleasure seeking impulses55
6442497588dictionthe choice of words in oral and written discourse56
6442497589syntaxthe ordering and structuring of the words in a sentence57
6442497590dirgea song for the dead, its tone is typically slow, heavy, and melancholy58
6442497591dissonancethe grating of incompatible sounds59
6442497592doggerelcrude, simplistic verse, often in sing-song rhyme60
6442497593dramatic ironywhen the audience knows something that the characters in the drama do not61
6442497594dramatic monologuewhen a single speaker in literature says something to a silent audience62
6442497595elegya poem or prose selection that laments or meditates on the passing/death of something/someone of value63
6442497596elementsthe basic techniques of each genre of literature. IN SHORT STORY: characters, irony, theme, symbol, plot, setting. IN POETRY: figurative language, symbol, imagery, rhythm, rhyme. IN DRAMA: conflict, characters, climax, conclusion, exposition, rising action, falling action, props. IN NONFICTION: argument, evidence, reason, appeals, fallacies, thesis.64
6442497597ellipsisthree periods (...) indicating the omission of words in a thought or quotation65
6442497598empathya feeling of association or identification with an object/person66
6442497599end stoppeda term that describes a line of poetry that ends with a natural pause often indicated by a mark of punctuation67
6442497600enjambmentthe continuation of a syntactic unit from one line or couplet of a poem to the next with no pause68
6442497601epican extended narrative poem that tells of the adventures and exploits of a hero that is generally larger than life and is often considered a legendary figure69
6442497602mock epica parody form that deals with mundane events and ironically treats them as worthy of epic poetry70
6442497603epitaphlines that commemorate the dead at their burial place. usually a line or handful of lines, often serious or religious, but sometimes witty and even irreverent71
6442497604epigrama concise but ingenious, witty and thoughtful statement72
6442497605euphonywhen sounds blend harmoniously; pleasing, harmonious sounds73
6442497606epithetan adjective or phrase that expresses a striking quality of a person or thing74
6442497607eponymousa term for the title character of a work of literature75
6442497608euphemisma mild or less negative usage for a harsh or blunt term76
6442497609exegesisa detailed analysis or interpretation of a work of literature77
6442497610exposea piece of writing that reveals weaknesses, faults, frailties, or other short comings78
6442497611explicitto say or write something directly and clearly79
6442497612explicationthe interpretation/analysis of a text80
6442497613extended metaphora series of comparisons between two unlike objects that occur over a number of lines81
6442497614fablea short tale often featuring nonhuman character that act as people whose actions enable the author to make observations or draw useful lessons about human behavior. i.e Orwell's "Animal Farm"82
6442497615falling actionthe action in a play or story that occurs after the climax and that leads to the conclusion and often to the resolution of the conflict83
6442497616fantasya story containing unreal, imaginary features84
6442497617farcea comedy that contains an extravagant and nonsensical disregard of seriousness, although it may have a serious, scornful purpose85
6442497618figurative languagein contrast to literal language, this implies meanings. It includes devices such as metaphors, similes, and personification, etc.86
6442497619foila secondary character whose purpose is to highlight the characteristics of a main character, usually by contrast87
6442497620first person narrativea narrative told by a character involved in the story, using first-person pronouns such as "I" and "we"88
6442497621flashbacka return to an earlier time in a story or play in order to clarify present actions or circumstances i.e. Invisible Man89
6442497622foreshadowingan event or statement in a narrative that suggests, in miniature, a larger event that comes later90
6442497623footthe basic rhythmic unit of a line in poetry. it is formed by a combination of two or three syllables, either stressed or unstressed91
6442497624framea structure that provides premise or setting for a narrative92
6442497625free versea kind of poetry without rhymed lines, rhythm or fixed metrical feet93
6442497626genrea term used to describe literary forms, such as novel, play, and essay94
6442497627Gothic novela novel in which supernatural horrors and an atmosphere of unknown terror pervades the action. i.e. "Frankenstein"95
6442497628haranguea forceful sermon, lecture, or tirade96
6442497629hubristhe excessive pride/ambition that leads to the main character's downfall97
6442497630hyperboleexaggeration/deliberate overstatement98
6442497631humanisma belief that emphasizes faith and optimism in human potential and creativity99
6442497632implicitto say or write something that suggests and implies but never says it directly or clearly100
6442497633in medias resLatin for "in the midst of things"; a narrative that starts not at the beginning of events but at some other critical point101
6442497634idylla lyric poem or passage that describes a kind of ideal life or place102
6442497635imagea word or phrase representing that which can be seen, touched, tasted, smelled or felt103
6442497636inversionswitching customary order of elements in a sentence or phrase. when done badly it can give a stilted, artificial look-at-me-I'm-poetry feel to the verse. type of syntax104
6442497637ironya mode of expression in which the intended meaning is the opposite of what is stated, often implying ridicule or light sarcasm105
6442497638invectivea direct verbal assault; a denunciation. i.e. Candide106
6442497639kenninga device employed in Anglo-Saxon poetry in which the name of a thing is replaced by one of its functions/qualities, as in "ring-giver" for king and "wale-road" for ocean107
6442497640lamenta poem of sadness or grief over the death of a loved one or over some other intense loss108
6442497641lampoona satire109
6442497642light versea variety of poetry meant to entertain or amuse, butt sometimes with a satirical thrust110
6442497643loose sentencea sentence that is complete before its end. follows customary word order of English sentences i.e. subject-verb-object111
6442497644periodic sentencea sentence not grammatically complete until it has reached its final phrase; sentence that departs from the usual word order of English sentences by expressing its main thought only at the end112
6442497645lyricpersonal, reflective poetry that reveals the speaker's thoughts and feelings about the subject; the word is used to describe tone, it refers to a sweet, emotional melodiousness113
6442497646melodramaa form of cheesy theater in which the hero is very, very good, the villain mean and rotten, and the heroine oh-so-pure.114
6442497647litotesa form of understatement in which the negative of the contrary is used to achieve emphasis or intensity115
6442497648maxima saying or proverb expressing common wisdom or truth116
6442497649metaphora figure of speech that compares unlike objects117
6442497650metaphysical poetrythe work of poets, particularly those of 17th c., that uses elaborate conceits, is highly intellectual, and expresses the complexities of love and life118
6442497651meterthe pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables found in poetry119
6442497652metonymya figure of speech that uses the name of one thing to represent something else with which it is associated. e.g. "The White House says..."120
6442497653modethe general form, pattern, and manner of expression of a work of literature121
6442497654montagea quick succession of images/impressions used to express an idea122
6442497655moodthe emotional tone in a work of literature123
6442497656nemesisthe protagonist's archenemy or supreme and persistent difficulty124
6442497657objectivitythis treatment of a subject matter is an impersonal/outside view of events125
6442497658subjectivitythis treatment of a subject matter uses the interior/personal view of a single observer and is typically colored with that observer's emotional responses126
6442497659onomatopoeiawords that sound like what they mean127
6442497660morala brief and often simplistic lesson that a reader may infer from a work of literature128
6442497661motifa phrase, idea, event that through repetition serves to unify or convey a theme in a work of literature.129
6442497662museone of the ancient Greek goddesses presiding over the arts. the imaginary source of inspiration for an artist or writer130
6442497663mythan imaginary story that has become accepted part of the cultural or religious tradition of a group/society. often used to explain natural phenomena.131
6442497664narrativea form of verse or prose that tells a story132
6442497665naturalisma term often used as a synonym for "realism"; also a view of experiences that is generally characterized as bleak and pessimistic133
6442497666non sequitura statement or idea that fails to follow logically from the one before134
6442497667novel of mannersa novel focusing on and describing the social customs and habits of a particular social group135
6442497668odea lyric poem usually marked by serious, respectful and exalted feelings toward the subject.136
6442497669omniscient narratora narrator with unlimited awareness, understanding, and insight of characters, setting, background, and all other elements of the story137
6442497670oxymorona phrase composed of opposites; a contradiction. juxtaposition of contradictory element to create a paradoxical effect138
6442497671oppositionone of the most useful concepts in analyzing literature. it means that you have a pair of elements that contrast sharply.139
6442497672ottava rimaan eight-line rhyming stanza of a poem140
6442497673parablelike a fable or an allegory, it's a story that instructs; a story consisting of events from which a moral or spiritual truth may be derived141
6442497674paradoxa statement that seems self-contradictory yet true142
6442497675parallelismrepeated syntactical similarities used for effect143
6442497676parodyan imitation of a work meant to ridicule its style and subject144
6442497677paraphrasea version of a text put into simpler, everyday, words145
6442497678pastorala work of literature dealing with rural life146
6442497679pathetic fallacyfaulty reasoning that inappropriately ascribes human feelings to nature or nonhuman objects147
6442497680pathosthat element in literature that stimulates pity or sorrow148
6442497681pentametera verse with five poetic feet per line149
6442497682personathe role/facade that a character assumes or depicts to a reader, viewer, or the world at large; the narrator in a non-first-person novel150
6442497683personificationgiving an inanimate object human like qualities or form151
6442497684plotthe interrelationship among the events in a story, including exposition, rising action, climax, falling action and resolution152
6442497685picaresque novelan episodic novel about a roguelike wanderer who lives off his wits. e.g. "Don Quixote", "Moll Flanders"153
6442497686plainta poem or speech expressing sorrow154
6442497687point of viewthe perspective from which the action of a novel in presented.155
6442497688omniscient narrator3rd person narrator who sees like God into each character's mind and understands all the action going on.156
6442497689limited omniscient narrator3rd person narrator who generally reports only what one character (usually the main) sees, and who only reports the thoughts of that one privileged character.157
6442497690objective narrator3rd person narr. who only reports on what would be visible to a camera, doesn't know what the character is thinking unless the character speaks of it.158
6442497691first person narratorthis is a narrator who is a character in the story and tells the tale from his/her POV. when the narrator is crazy, a liar, very young, or for some reason not entirely credible, the narrator is "unreliable"159
6442497692prosodythe grammar of meter and rhythm in poetry160
6442497693protagonistthe main character in a work of literature161
6442497694preludean introductory poem to a longer work of verse162
6442497695punthe usually humorous use of a word in such a way to suggest two or more meanings163
6442497696pseudonymalso called "pen name", a false name or alias used by writers. i.e Mark Twain (Samuel Clemens) George Eliot (Mary Ann Evans) George Orwell (Eric Blair)164
6442497697quatriana four-line poem or a four-line unit of a longer poem165
6442497698refraina line or set of lines repeated several times over the course of a poem166
6442497699requiema song of prayer for the dead167
6442497700realismthe depiction of people, things, and events as they really are without idealization or exaggeration for effect168
6442497701rhetoricthe language of a work and its style; words, often highly emotional, used to convince or sway an audience169
6442497702rhetorical questiona question that suggests an answer. in theory, the effect is that it causes the listener to feel they have come up with the answer themselves170
6442497703rhapsodyan intensely passionate verse or section of verse, usually of love or praise171
6442497704rhymethe repetition of similar sounds at regular intervals, used mostly in poetry172
6442497705rhyme schemethe patterns of rhymes within a given poem i.e. abba173
6442497706rhythmthe pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables that make up a line of poetry. similar to meter174
6442497707romancean extended narrative about improbable events and extraordinary people in exotic places175
6442497708sarcasma sharp, caustic expression or remark; a bitter jibe or taunt176
6442497709satirea literary style used to poke fun at, attack or ridicule an idea, vice, or foible, often for the purpose of inducing change. great subjects for this include hypocrisy, vanity and greed, especially if those characteristics have become institutionalized in society177
6442497710similefigurative comparison using the words "like" or "as"178
6442497711settingthe total environment for the action in a novel/play. it includes time, place, historical milieu, and social, political and even spiritual circumstances179
6442497712sentimentala term that describes characters' excessive emotional response to experience; also nauseatingly nostalgic and mawkish180
6442497713sentimenta synonym for "view" or "feeling"; also refined and tender emotion in literature181
6442497714scansionthe act of determining the meter of a poetic line.182
6442497715sonneta popular form of verse consisting of fourteen lines and a prescribed rhyme scheme. two types: Shakespearean and Petrarchan183
6442497716soliloquya speech spoken by a character alone on stage. meant to convey the impression that the audience is listening to the character's THOUGHTS. unlike an aside, it is not meant to imply that the actor acknowledges the audience's presence184
6442497717stanzaa group of lines in verse, roughly analogous in function to the paragraph in prose; a group of two or more lines in poetry combined according to subject matter, rhyme, or some other plan185
6442497718stream of consciousnessa style of writing in which the author tries to reproduce the random flow of thoughts in the human mind, e.g. Ernest Hemingway186
6442497719stock charactersstandard or cliched character types: the drunk, the miser, the foolish girl, etc.187
6442497720suggestto imply, infer indicate. goes along with the concept of implicit188
6442497721stylethe manner in which an author uses and arranges words, shapes ideas, forms sentences and creates a structure to convey ideas189
6442497722subplota subordinate or minor collection of events in a novel or play, usually connected to the main plot190
6442497723subtextthe implied meaning that underlies the main meaning of a work of literature191
6442497724summarya simple retelling of what you've just read. what you DON'T want to do in the Open Essay section :)192
6442497725symbolisma device in literature where an object represents an idea193
6442497726synecdochea figure of speech in which a part signifies the whole or the whole signifies the part194
6442497727themethe main idea or meaning, often an abstract idea upon which a work of literature is built195
6442497728thesisthe main position of an argument. the central contention that will be supported196
6442497729tonethe author's attitude toward the subject being written about. it's the characteristic emotion that pervades a work or part of a work197
6442497730tragic flawin a tragedy, this is the weakness of a character in an otherwise good individual that ultimately leads to his demise198
6442497731tragedya form of literature in which the hero is destroyed by some character flaw and a set of forces that cause the hero considerable anguish, or even death199
6442497732travestya grotesque parody200
6442497733truisma way-too-obvious truth201
6442497734utopiaan idealized place. imaginary communities in which people are able to live in happiness, prosperity and peace. Sir Thomas More came up with this idea.202
6442497735verbal ironya discrepancy between the true meaning of a situation and the literal meaning of the written or spoken words203
6442497736versea synonym for poetry. also a group of lines in a song or poem; also a single line of poetry204
6442497737verisimilitudesimilar to the truth; the quality of realism in a work that persuades readers that they are getting a vision of life as it is205
6442497738versificationthe structural form of a line of verse as revealed by the number of feet it contains. i.e. monometer = 1 foot; tetrameter = 4 feet; pentameter = 5 feet, etc.206
6442497739villanellea French verse form calculated to appear simple and spontaneous but consisting of 19 lines and a prescribed pattern of rhymes207
6442497740voicethe real or assumed personality used by a writer or speaker. a verb is in the active voice when it expresses an action performed by its subject. a verb is in the passive voice when it expresses an action performed upon its subject or when the subject is the result of the action. Active: The crew raked the leaves. Passive: The leaves were raked by the crew.208
6442497741witthe quickness of intellect and the power and talent for saying brilliant things that surprise and delight by their unexpectedness; the power to comment subtly and pointedly on the foibles of the passing scene209
6442497742zeugmathe use of a word to modify two or more words, but used for different meanings. "He close the door and his heart on his lost love."210
6442497743anastropheinversion of the natural or usual word order211
6442497744parenthesisinsertion of some verbal unit in a position that interrupts the normal syntactical flow of the sentence212
6442497745appositionplacing side by side two coordinate elements, the second of which serves as an explanation or modification of the first. "The mountain was the earth, her home."213
6442497746ellipsisdeliberate omission of a word or words which are readily implied by context214
6442497747asyndetondeliberate omission of conjunctions between a series of related clauses. used to produce a hurried rhythm in the sentence.215
6442497748polysyndetonthe deliberate use of many conjunctions. its effect is to slow down the rhythm of the sentence216
6442497749anaphorarepetition of the same words or group of words at the beginning of successive clauses. e.g. "I have a dream..."217
6442497750epistropherepetition of the same word or group of words at the ends of successive clauses "When we first came we were very many and you were very few. Now you are many and we are getting very few."218
6442497751epanalepsisrepetition at the end of a clause of the word that occurred at the beginning of the clause. "Blood hat bought blood, and blows have answer'd blows"219
6442497752anadiplosisrepetition of the last word of one clause at the beginning of the following clause. "The crime was common, common be the pain."220
6442497753climaxthe arrangement of words, phrases, or clauses in an order of importance221
6442497754antimetabolerepetition of words, in successive clauses, in reverse grammatical order. "Ask not what your country can do for you; ask what you can do for your country."222
6442497755chiasmusreversal of grammatical structures in successive phrases or clauses. "Exalts his enemies, his friends destroys."223
6442497756polyptotonrepetition of words derived from the same root. "But in this desert country they may see the land being rendered USELESS by OVERUSE."224
6442497757antanaclasisrepetition of a word in two different senses. "Your argument is sound, nothing but sound."225
6442497758paronomasiause of words alike in sound but different in meaning. "ask for me tomorrow and you will find me a GRAVE man."226
6442497759syllepsisthe use of a word understood differently in relation to two or more other words, which it modifies/governs. "The ink, like our pig, keeps running out of the pen."227
6442497760anthimeriathe substitution of one part of speech for another "I'll UNHAIR they head."228
6442497761periphrasissubstitution of a descriptive word or phrase for a proper name or of a proper name for a quality associated with the name. "They do not escape JIM CROW; they merely encounter another, not less deadly variety."229
6442497762autobiographyan account of a person's own life230
6442497763dialecta way of speaking that is characteristic of a particular region/group of people231
6442497764epiphanyin a literary work, a moment of sudden insight/revelation that a character experiences232
6442497765essaya short piece of non-fiction prose that examines a single subject from a limited POV233
6442497766suspensethe uncertainty/anxiety we feel about what is going to happen next in a story234

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