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Unit15 AmericanLiterature

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STUDY GUIDE
GRADE 11 | 21ST CENTURY LITERATURE FROM THE PHILIPPINES AND THE WORLD
UNIT 15
American Literature
The United States of America is referred to by many as the “El Dorado” or the land of opportunity.
Recognized as a melting pot of diversity, this land has so much to offer, particularly when it comes
to literature. Many well-known literary masterpieces have originated from America, and perhaps,
numerous influential writers we know are Americans. In this unit, we are going to discuss American
literature by focusing on four of its literary periods.
Objectives
At the end of the lesson, you should be able to:
•• Describe American literature;
•• Discuss the four literary periods that helped mold American literature; and
•• Differentiate the masterpieces from each literary period.
Learn about It!
I.
American Literature during the Colonial and Revolutionary Periods
•• The colonial period began when Jamestown, the first English settlement in America, was
founded in 1607 and ended during the beginning of the American Revolution in 1775.
•• In the 1630s, there was a big wave of British immigration to Boston. This phenomenon
paved the way for various events in American literature in this period. It is at this
time that the Puritans, Protestants who follow the Bible in the strictest manner, were
dominating England. In this milieu, the Puritan ideals had influenced not only British
society but also its colonies. However, because of the criticism of the Catholic Church and
the lack of political support, they fled to America. The most significant event of this era
was the invention of the printing press, which quickly changed the literary landscape not
only in England but also in America. During the colonial period, the many places became
the key spots of printing literary works. These places are Cambridge, Boston, New York,
Philadelphia, and Annapolis.
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•• Because of this breakthrough, the oral literature that was cherished by the Native
American Indians was soon replaced by printed literature. Moreover, it was also through
the violent suppression of the Native Americans that their literary heritage was almost
eradicated in American literary history.
•• Many political and military events happened that shattered the indigenous American
culture. Because of these events, English became the local language as well as the
preferred language for literary writing. The most prominent form of literary piece was the
pamphlet that extolled the European conquerors.
•• Since the Puritans exalted religiosity, many of the early writings of this period centered
on faith, including internal struggles and hypocrisy of the faithful. Notable religious
writers were:
«« John Winthrop – a Puritan who influenced the government and religions of other
colonies through his writings
«« Edward Winslow – wrote several works that were of massive value to the historian of
the Plymouth colony
«« William Bradford – wrote a journal chronicling the Pilgrim venture
«« Anne Bradstreet – one of the first poets to write English verse in the American
colonies
«« Edward Taylor – one of the foremost poets of colonial British North America
«« Michael Wigglesworth - an author of rhymed treatises expounding Puritan doctrines
«« Nicholas Noyes – wrote competent verses in the Puritan metaphysical tradition
•• Because of the attempt of the British government to impose cultural hegemony
(dominance of a culture over another culture) and to dominate the minority culture, some
writings focused on typifying the contact and conflicts of the Britons with the Indians.
Such themes are very evident in the works of Daniel Gookin, Alexander Whitaker, John
Mason, Benjamin Church, and Mary Rowlandson.
•• During this era, we can also see the rise of African-American literature as there was an
influx of Africans coming to America as slaves for the Americans. Two notable AfricanAmerican writers of this time were Phillis Weatley, who was a slave brought to America,
and Olaudah Equiano, who is known for his writings that criticized the British Empire
and America for its tolerance for slavery.
•• The natives’ realization of the atrocities of their conquerors, such as their having no
representation in the government and their desire to have the same rights from British
subjects, brought about the revolutionary period, which ran from 1765 to 1783. The
literature of this period was very political because it was seen as an avenue by American
writers to express their protest against the British Empire. Two keynote personalities
during this time were Benjamin Franklin and Thomas Paine.
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•• As a subtle condemnation of England, satires came into the limelight. The prominent
satirists were John Trumbull, Francis Hopkinson, and Philip Morin Freneau.
•• In the Norton Anthology for American Literature (2007), the American revolutionary
period was described as, “The enormous scientific, economic, social, and philosophical,
changes of the 18th century, called the Enlightenment, impacted the authority of
clergyman and scripture, making way for democratic principles. The increase in
population helped account for the greater diversity of opinion in religious and political
life as seen in the literature of this time.”
II.
American Renaissance
•• This period is regarded as the “Golden Era” of American literature because writers
showed the spirit of liberation in their works. It also led to the popularization of
democratic literature. F.O. Matthiessen coined the term American Renaissance in 1941.
He asserted that American Renaissance literature is “literature for democracy and for
the people.” Through literature, it was expected that people will imbibe the spirit of
democracy in their daily lives.
•• Literary enthusiasts asserted that writers should have their unique styles that are only
seen in American literature. The purpose of this was to create a national identity and
to make American literature known to the world. It was also an initiative to show the
demarcation between American literature and British literature. Notable writers of this
period were Washington Irving, William Cullen Bryant, and James Fenimore Cooper.
These writers explored local color, the American environment, and daily life to give a
distinct texture to the American literary tradition.
•• It was also during the American Renaissance that American writers had a fresh look
toward their writing and wrote without the influence of the British. Many of the most
famous writers emerged in this era of literature. Also, two groups of writers emerged,
namely the transcendentalists and the dark romantics.
Transcendentalists
«« They believed that knowledge could be obtained through intuition and contemplation
of inner spirits and not merely through the senses.
«« Major writers of this movement were:
ƒƒ Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882)
ƒƒ Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)
ƒƒ Margaret Fuller (1810–1850)
ƒƒ William Henry Channing (1810–1884)
ƒƒ George Ripley (1802–1880)
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ƒƒ Emily Dickinson (1830–1886)
ƒƒ Amos Bronson Alcott (1799–1888)
ƒƒ Elizabeth Peabody (1804–1894)
Dark Romantics
«« They explored mankind’s darker side through writing subjects that are grotesque,
gothic, and extremely melancholic.
«« They also explored the conflict between good and evil in their literary works.
«« Major writers of this movement were:
ƒƒ Nathaniel Hawthorne (1804–1864)
ƒƒ Edgar Allan Poe (1809–1849)
ƒƒ Herman Melville (1819–1891
•• During this period, women writers started to become empowered because of gradual
access to education. This paved the way for the rise of feminine writing and aesthetics.
However, although female writers were given opportunities to write, their works were
not that popular since America was still a patriarchal society. Despite this, there were
some women writers who became popular figures of this time, and these were Harriet
Beecher Stowe and Fanny Fern. In addition, Abraham Lincoln even commented that
Harriet Beecher Stowe’s novel Uncle Tom’s Cabin ignited civil war within the American
society.
III.
Realism in American Literature
•• The literary movement realism articulates the portrayal of the actualities of life. Samuel
Langhorne Clemens, who is more widely known by his pseudonym Mark Twain, is
regarded as the father of realism in American literature. The most remarkable realist
masterpieces of Twain are The Adventures of Tom Sawyer and The Adventures of Huckleberry
Finn. According to Norton Anthology for American Literature (2007) Twain has been
a popular figure of the realism movement because “Twain’s style – influenced by
journalism, wedded to the vernacular, direct and unadorned but also highly evocative
and irreverently humorous – changed the way Americans write their language. His
characters speak like real people and sound distinctively American, using local dialects,
newly invented words, and regional accents.”
•• This new approach to literature shows objectivity and fidelity to the facts of the matter. It
embraced the concept that people were neither completely good nor completely bad but
somewhere in between.
•• A popular literary device used in this kind of literature was the frame narrative or the
story within a story. In more technical terms, this is called “mise en abyme.” This device is
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not new to world literature as it has been used in earlier masterpieces such as Geoffrey
Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales.
•• To better understand how realism is portrayed in literature, we can best describe it by
referring to the writing style of American writers at that time. Realist writers utilized the
vernacular language in writing. In this light, readers can easily connect to what they read
since the language used was localized. Hence, we can see the fusion of local languages
and regional accents as characters delivered their discourses in the texts.
•• Apart from Twain, there were numerous realist American writes who were famous as
well. These were George W. Cable, Thomas Nelson Page, Joel Chandler Harris, Mary
Noailles Murfree (Charles Egbert Craddock), Sarah Orne Jewett, Mary E. Wilkins Freeman,
Henry Cuyler Bunner, and William Sydney Porter (O. Henry).
IV.
American Literature in the Modern and Postmodern Periods
•• During the 1950s, we can see a big and drastic change in the American literary tradition.
That change revolutionized how writers compose their works. This, of course, comes
from the social movements such as the two World Wars and the Cold War. Writers
challenged the norms and traditional practices of writing. Hence, this phenomenon led to
the beginnings of the modern and postmodern periods.
•• These eras broke away from the seemingly realist paragon that already dominated
American literature. Guerin, et. al. (2011) stated in their book that: “In character
development, both modern and postmodern literature explore subjectivism, turning
from external reality to examine inner states of consciousness, in many cases drawing
on modernist examples in the ‘stream of consciousness’ styles of Virginia Woolf and
James Joyce, or explorative poems like ‘The Waste Land’ by T. S. Eliot. In addition, both
modern and postmodern literature explores fragmentariness in narrative- and characterconstruction.”
•• Influential writers of these periods were Virginia Woolf, James Joyce, and T. S. Eliot.
Woolf became popular because of her “stream of consciousness” style of writing. Her
style of writing gives readers a view of what goes on in the characters’ minds. Joyce and
Eliot, on the other hand, were powerhouses of modernism and postmodernism because
of the fragmentariness of their writing.
•• Eliot’s poems are perfect illustrations of the influences of modernism and postmodernism
in American literature. Eliot’s poems are fragmentary, which means they neither ascribe
to a continuous flow of thought nor follow a coherent set of ideas.
•• Simply put, modernism and postmodernism underscored that literary writing has to be
“free.” In this essence, writers of these periods are unconventional as it deconstructed
the norms in writing. These distortions for them are not regarded as rebellious acts of
writing. However, such “delineations” are the unique features of modern and postmodern
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works. If a writer chooses to bombard his poems with so many exclamation points after
every word, it will not mean that he is not a good writer and that he does not know
anything about the structure of English. Rather, the writer adheres to the style of modern
and postmodern literature. Modernist and postmodernist writers mimic the dizzying
events that unfold in their era.
•• The most notable writers of these periods were T. S. Eliot, Virginia Woolf, John Ashbery,
Rita Dove, Anne Sexton, and Sylvia Plath.
Learning Tasks
•• Task 1: Create a table to show the different characteristics of American literature in the
colonial and revolutionary periods, American Renaissance, Realism, and Modern and
Postmodern periods. In each column, write the key terms and notable phrases that
characterize the literary period.
•• Task 2: Create a graphic organizer that will show the different writers who emerged in a
particular era. For each writer, indicate a brief note that describes his or her contribution
to the development of American literature.
•• Task 3: Research more about the modernism and postmodernism periods in American
literature and point out its differences with the three other periods with the use of a
Venn diagram.
Examples
Questions:
1. What was the greatest innovation in the colonial period that popularized print literature?
2. Who among the following writers is not a realist?
a. George Cable
b. Rita Dove
c. Thomas Nelson Page
d. O. Henry
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3. Which the following is not a characteristic of modern and postmodern literary works?
a. depicts the actualities of life
b. makes use of fragmentary narratives
c. shows an unconventional writing style
d. uses a distorted language structure
Answers:
1. printing press
Explanation:
The invention of the printing press led to the production of more literary works.
2. b. Rita Dove
Explanation:
Rita Dove is a postmodern writer.
3. a. depicts the actualities of life
Explanation:
This is a characteristic of a realist work.
Wrap Up
American literature is indeed a very influential body of literary works. In order for us to better
understand it as a whole, we need to revisit four important periods that molded American
literature into what it is now.
•• The colonial and revolutionary periods anchored on the premise that literature should be
religious and that there have to be fostering of humanistic faculties for whoever will read it.
•• The American Renaissance asserted that literature is for democracy.
•• As a literary movement, realism believes that good literature typifies the actualities of life.
•• The modern and postmodern periods underscored that being unconventional would
not hinder writers from producing beautiful works. All of these periods are important in
providing us a framework on the development of American literature.
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Bibliography
Abrams, Robert E. Landscape and Ideology in American Renaissance Literature: Topographies of
Skepticism. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004.
Baym, Nina, ed. Norton Anthology of American Literature, Vol. A: Beginnings to 1820. Bt Bound,
2007.
Bremer, Francis J. John Winthrop: America’s Forgotten Founding Father. New York: Oxford
University Press, 2003.
Emerson, Everett H., ed. American Literature, 1764–1789: The Revolutionary Years. Madison,
Wisconsin: The University of Wisonsin Press, 1977.
Gray, Richard. A History of American Literature. 2nd ed. West Sussex: Wiley-Blackwell, 2011.
Gregson, Susan R. Phillis Wheatley. Mankato, Minnesota: Bridgestone Books, 2002.
Guerin, Wilfred L., Earle Labor, Lee Morgan, Jeanne C. Reesman, and John R. Willingham. A
Handbook of Critical Approaches to Literature. 6th ed. New York: Oxford University Press,
2011.
Hall, David D. Cultures of Print: Essays in the History of the Book. Amherst, Massachusetts:
University of Massachusetts Press, 1996.
Long, William Joseph. Outlines of English and American Literature. Whitefish, Montana:
Kessinger Publishing LLC, 2010.
Meyers, Karen H. Colonialism and the Revolutionary Period (Beginnings–1800). 2nd ed. New
York: Chelsea House Publishers, 2010.
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