1 / 52

American Literary Movements

American Literary Movements. Puritan Literature - Content. Time frame = 1650 - 1750

hartsell
Download Presentation

American Literary Movements

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. American Literary Movements

  2. Puritan Literature - Content • Time frame = 1650 - 1750 • Life is a “test”: the winners go to Heaven, the losers to Damnation. Earth is a battlefield between God and Satan. America is a holy “Promised Land” where Puritan Christians will create Heaven on Earth, a Christian utopia.

  3. Puritan Literature • Sermons and Religious Tracts • Diaries • Histories • Personal Narratives (usually survivors of Native American attacks) • Religious Poems

  4. Puritan Literature (Continued) • Very little imaginative literature produced. It was often just for personal satisfaction, so not published.

  5. Puritan Literature – Historical Context • Puritan settlers fled England where they were being jailed for their religious beliefs. • They came to New England to establish their own brand of Christianity. • Believed all humans were corrupt and sinful to the core. • God selects a few (not everyone!) and saves them, although no one knows who He has chosen to go to Heaven or Hell. • Believed they could use the bible to interpret history, create laws, condemn criminals, and predict the future. • Puritans were highly educated and literate, mainly to read and understand scripture.

  6. Colonial Literature-Content • Time frame: 1750-1800 • Politicians or patriots writing reasonable, logical, yet often incendiary (the ability to cause strife) material to incite revolt against English rule. • Intended for wide circulation.

  7. Colonial Literature-Genre • Political pamphlets, “broadsides,” and speeches • Political documents (ex: Declaration of Independence) • Travel writing • Almanacs

  8. Colonial Literature- Style • Reasonable and logical, usually offering persuasive arguments • Highly ornate writing style

  9. Colonial Literature-Effect • Patriotism grows by instilling pride in Americans, plus creates common agreement about issues • Shows differences between Americans and Europeans • Still little creative literature produced

  10. Colonial Literature-Historical Context • English rule was becoming a weight, and while many colonists tried to patch up the relationship there was a growing belief that “American” meant something different than “English”---and so it made no sense to many that a foreign country should rule America. • Enlightenment philosophers in Europe contributed many new ideas, including government as a “contract” which people must accept willingly.

  11. Romanticism (The American Renaissance) Content • Time Frame = 1800 – 1850 • Not an exclusively American movement: Romanticism was extremely popular throughout Europe for well over 100 years. It stresses the freedom of the artist to be highly imaginative, emotional, and/or spontaneous in writing.

  12. Romanticism – Content (Con’t) • Romanticism asserts the following: • The worth of the individual • The goodness of humanity • The glory of communion with nature

  13. Romanticism - Genre • Imaginative fiction (both novels and short stories) • Poetry, often focusing on nature

  14. Romanticism - Style • Flowery, dramatic phrasing/wording intended to heighten emotional effect. • Exotic locations, such as the sea, wilderness, or distant past. • Larger-than-life characters, usually mistakably heroic or evil; they are obviously imaginary and not intended to be realistic (often stereotypical).

  15. Romanticism - Effect • An explosion of creative output, sometimes “fluffy” (being only light entertainment), sometimes sublime. • The American past was mythologized. • The idea that each person is important is underlined in the public consciousness. • Has never completely died: Some novels today (and many movies) are “Romantic” in part or in whole.

  16. Romanticism – Historical Context • For centuries leading up to this period, literature was to be logical, orderly, and fact-based, with authors detached and unemotional in their writing. • English writers set the standard for what was “good” in literature; Americans, in part, wrote Romantically because the English did – although it fit perfectly with the new American mindset.

  17. Transcendentalism – “The New English Renaissance” • America’s Major Romantic Movement • 1840-1855

  18. Transcendentalism - Content • Definitely Romantic, “Transcendentalists” believed not in Christianity per se, but in Nature as a guide for spiritual living. • We are all “one” in a mystical sense, but we each should emphasize our individuality to the exclusion of society, government, or anything else.

  19. Transcendentalism - Genre • Poetry • Essays (usually personal essays) • Novels

  20. Transcendentalism - Style • Similar to Romanticism • Promoted fresh and new content • Little use of epics or mythology • Writing drawn from personal experience

  21. Transcendentalism - Effect • Individualism and self-reliance codified - and is still important in the American consciousness today. • Fueled the abolitionist movement, for Transcendentalists promoted human value of everyone, including slaves. • “Civil disobedience” of an unjust government or society first promoted, returning many times in the decades to follow (MLK).

  22. Transcendentalism – Historical Context • No one is exactly sure why New England experienced such a tremendous birth of talent at this one time. • Slavery was debated nationally.

  23. Gothic (sub-genre of Romanticism) • 1800-1850+ • Gothic writing uses medieval or mysterious elements in literature—often even supernatural.

  24. Gothic Style • The tone ranges from gloomy to horrifying. • Readers are often faced with forces or powers they do not understand. Sometimes this force is insanity, which afflicts a main character or narrator. • Hold readers’ attention through dread of terrible events or possibilities. • Settings are dark forests, extreme vegetation, swamps, ruins, haunted locales, etc.

  25. Gothic Effect • Today in literature we still read many Gothic-inspired tales.

  26. Gothic Historical Context • Romanticism stresses wild imagination; Gothic tales regularly toy with logic and fact.

  27. Realism • 1860-1914 • Opposed to Romanticism, Realism advocated writing about life as it actually is. Focus on realistic people, realistic events, and tell it in a realistic manner. • Tall tales and the like are, ironically, acceptable within Realism as long as they have a realistic flavor.

  28. Realism Genre • Novels • Short Stories • Tall tales

  29. Realism Style • Prefers objective narrator (third person point of view) OR a realistic first person narrator • Characters not idealized, but have normal human flaws and virtues; they are often from the lower class (immigrants, laborers, homeless, etc.). Sometimes their choices fail, sometimes their endeavors are unsuccessful • “Local color”/ Regionalism: Dialogue includes vernacular diction from specific locations around the country; landscape and values of each locale also captured in print • Although most stories do have a moral, they do not directly say the point to the reader; it must be inferred from the reading. • Society often shown to be corrupt (due to materialism, human nature, etc.)

  30. Realism Effect • Led to a pessimistic view of life (see Naturalism) • Modern and Postmodern literature are overwhelmingly Realistic.

  31. Realism Historical Context • Civil War disillusionment and the civilizing of the American frontier cause a demand for a “truer” type of literature that does not idealize the people or places.

  32. Naturalism (sub-genre of realism) • 1880-1920 • A harsher, more pessimistic form of Realism, Naturalists believed the universe was unpredictable and uncaring. Naturalism is “deterministic”: humanity has no free will, for we are victims of our heredity, environment, or just sheer blind chance. Quite often, Naturalists show life to be a cruel joke.

  33. Naturalism Genre • Short story • Novel • poetry

  34. Naturalism Style • Many Realism traits, especially in style of writing (vernacular use, lower class characters, etc.) • Dominant subject is the violent struggle to survive in a cold, uncaring universe—a struggle the individual often loses. Antagonists are chance, one’s heredity, nature, or other humans. • “Brute within” idea: each individual is comprised of strong and warring emotions such as greed, ambition, hatred, narcissism; which will emerge depends upon the circumstance. We are like dumb animals when it comes to emotion.

  35. Naturalism Effect • Raised important issues such as urban depression

  36. Historical Context • In a country that had traditionally been agricultural, half of America’s population was in 12 cities by 1919, resulting in overcrowded housing, unsanitary living conditions, low pay, poor working conditions, etc. • The ideas of Darwin (natural selection/ “survival of the fittest”) come to prominence, infringing upon religious beliefs and Romantic notions of humanity’s inherent value.

  37. Modernism • 1914 – 1946 • Still heavily influential (if not dominant) in the present day

  38. Modernism - Content • Leading up to WWI and afterwards, “Modern” life seemed radically different from traditional life (more scientific, faster, and more technological). • Society’s values were in shambles with little agreement on values or behaviors. • Modern literature showed people as alienated and disconnected from one another, society, and/or God.

  39. Modernism - Genre • Experimental novels and short stories • Experimental poems • Drama

  40. Modernism – Style • Highly experimental poems (abstract, grammar, unpoetic phrasing, etc.) • Prose experiments: use of fragments, juxtaposition, interior monologue, and stream of consciousness. • No overall conformity among writers. Each seeking own style. • Common subjects were grief over loss or uselessness of past traditions and inability for people to communicate.

  41. Modernism – Style (con’t) • Tone normally down, depressed, or lost • Often little or no resolution, for this mirrors a Modernist’s reality.

  42. Modernism - Effect • Common readers are often alienated by this literature due to experiments and depressing tone.

  43. Modernism – Historical Context • Industrialism and invention changed life dramatically. • Many jobs eliminated and people were not as valuable as they once were in filling roles. • “The Great War,” World War I, was the first war of mass destruction due to technological advances. • More killed in a shorter period of time than before. • The Consciousness of the world became jaded.

  44. Modernism – Historical Context (con’t) • Morals and values (and religion) seemed to have been destroyed by the war. • Disillusionment of youths caused them to rebel against the older generation who they blamed for the mass destruction of the War. • The rise of youth culture during Jazz Age was a time of young people looking for an identity in a fast-paced world. • Crash of 1929 and Depression fed into the feelings of a society gone wrong.

  45. Harlem Renaissance- Content • Time period: 1920-1936 • Period of intense creative activity among African- American writers and other artists living in Harlem in New York during the 1920s. • Artistic productivity bloomed in a short period of time. • Writers, poets, philosophers, musicians, visual artists, and filmmakers gathered to form a large and diverse talent base whose achievements reflected and challenged societal conventions.

  46. Harlem Renaissance- Historical Context • The roots of this movement stem back to the Reconstruction period, when Southern African Americans tried to claim the education, economic opportunity, and political liberty that slavery had long denied to them.

  47. Harlem Renaissance- Style and Genres • Sought to reach the entire community, not merely its most highly educated members. • Novels • Short Stories • Drama • Poetry

  48. Postmodernism • Time = 1946 – Present • People observe life as the media presents it, rather than experiencing life directly • Popular culture saturates people’s lives • Absurdity and coincidence

  49. Postmodernism - Content • A transformation of Modernism; the search for values (especially moral behavior toward others) is still important, but it is doubtful there are answers. The world is absurd: no values or truths are eternal, everything is momentary and relative.

  50. Postmodernism – Genre/Style • Mixing of fantasy with nonfiction/reality; blurs lines of reality for reader • No heroes • Concern with individual in isolation (question of identity/stream-of-consciousness) • Challenges most limitations, for they are seen as oppressive • Detached, unemotional • Narratives • Present Tense

More Related