American Literature Overview
American Literature Overview
American Literature Overview
LITERATURE
The First Settlers.
The early settlers in America came from
England at two distinct periods in her history, which
were characterized by different intellectual and social
conditions. Naturally, therefore, they established in the
new world two distinct types of civilization. The
settlers who came to Virginia in 1607 were Elizabethan
Englishmen, contemporaries of Shakespeare. They
were bold, daring men with a certain flavor of
romance about them. Some were moved by the spirit
of adventure merely. Some were gentlemen of broken
fortune in search of easily acquired wealth. A few were
idlers and criminals.
The First Settlers.
They did not expect to make their homes in the
new world, but hoped soon to return to England rich
and influential. The Pilgrims, on the other hand, who
settled in Plymouth in 1620, and the Puritans, who
established the Massachusetts Bay Colony a few years
later, came from an England which had already been
largely transformed by the new religious influences of
Puritanism. They were stern men of strong religious
principles, lovers of freedom, exiles, seeking in an
unknown and inhospitable land a place where they
could establish permanent homes, live independent
lives, and worship God in their own way. They were
inspired not by dreams of wealth but by dreams of
freedom.
Conditions Unfavorable for
Literature
In neither case were conditions favorable
for the development of literature. The New
Englanders were too busy cutting down forests,
building houses, clearing the fields of stumps and
rocks, planting and cultivating crops, and
defending their lives against wild beasts and
Indians, to spend much time in writing books.
Among the Virginians the conditions of life were
easier, but the population did not settle in village
communities favorable to the intellectual contact
and extended education which develop a literary
class.
Conditions Unfavorable for
Literature
Nor did they live under the primitive
conditions which develop such popular
traditional literature as the old English ballads
and romances. After exploring the country and
finding that wealth could not be gained in a day,
they took up large landed estates, and cultivated
vast tobacco plantations. They lived the active life
of the open air in close contact with nature, given
to free and open hospitality when opportunity
served, but little inclined to study and reflection.
They developed a literature even less rapidly than
the Pilgrims and Puritans.
Historical and Biographical
Writing
John Smith (1579-1631)
Focuses on
1. POET
–oral poetry-Native Americans passed down stories
& histories orally
-devotional poetry written by colonists to worship
2. HISTORIANS-journals tell us about life in young
America
3. PREACHER- hymns, songs of praise
- sermons-speeches given as instruction in religion &
morals
ROLES OF WRITERS
4. Lawmaker
-speeches-helped shape American ideas &
government
-tracts – pamphlets; argumentative – about a
religious or political topics
5. Autobiographer
-diaries
Revolutionary Period
(1750-1815)
Writers focused on explaining and justifying
the American Revolution
After the Revolution, this period becomes
known as Early Nationalism. Writers begin to
ponder what it really means to be an
American.
After the War of 1812, which removed the
last British troops from North America, there
was an even greater focus on nationalism,
patriotism, and American identity
Revolutionary Period
(1750-1815)