Title: The 19th Century American Literary History
1The 19th CenturyAmerican Literary History
- Introduction to Literary and Cultural Studies
2The 13 Original States
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4Expansion
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6Criticizer of the Mexican American War Henry
David Thoreau (1817-62)
- Walden, or Life in the Woods (1854)
- On the Duty of Civil Disobedience (1849)
Transcendentalism main representatives Thoreau
and Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-82) Seeking for
intellectual and spiritual independence of
America (after having achieved political
independence) Focus on the individual and on
self-reliance
Americas Intellectual Declaration of
IndependenceRalph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)
The American Scholar (1837)
We have listened too long to the courtly muses
of Europe
7MANIFEST DESTINY
John Gast American Progress (1872)
8James Fenimore Cooper (1789-1851)
- The Leather-Stocking Novels
Fiction concerned with the frontier Cooper
introduced the character of Natty Bumppo, a
uniquely American personification of rugged
individualism and the pioneer spirit, a romantic
mythological frontiersman. The Pioneers (1823),
The Last of the Mohicans (1826), The Prairie
(1827), The Pathfinder (1840), The Deerslayer
(1841) James Fenimore Cooper was America's first
successful popular novelist.
9Gold Rush
10 The Transcontinental Railroad
11Expansion
- Lewis and Clark expedition (1804-1806)
- Annexations of territory Louisiana Purchase
(1803), Monroe Doctrine (1823), Annexation of
Texas (1845), Mexican American War (1846-48),
Gadsden Purchase (1853) - Manifest Destiny
- Gold Rush
- Transcontinental railroad (1869)
12Emily Dickinson 585
I like to see it lap the Miles  And lick the
Valleys up  And stop to feed itself at Tanks
 And then prodigious step  Around a Pile of
Mountains  And, supercilious peer In
Shanties by the sides of Roads And then a
Quarry pare  To fit its Ribs And crawl
between Complaining all the while In horrid
hooting stanza  Then chase itself down
Hill And neigh like Boanerges Then
punctual as a Star  Stop docile and
omnipotent  At its own stable door
13Walt Whitman (1819-1892)Leaves of Grass
- Strong opponent of slavery
- 1855 first edition of Leaves of Grass published
(which was at first criticized for its crudeness,
vulgar language and scandalous subject matter) - From the first publication Whitman worked on his
book, adding new poems and sections etc. ?
continual revisions made the history of the
publication complicated
Deathbed Edition (1891)
14 Geronimo (18291909)
Sitting Bull
ca. 1831 1890)
15The American Civil War (18611865)
The American Civil War divides the nation about
the question of slavery Plantation owning south
vs. increasingly anti-slavery north
Harriet Beecher Stowe Uncle Toms Cabin (1852)
Abraham Lincoln is often quoted as having
declared, "So this is the little lady who made
this big war."
16The Battle of Gettysburg (July 1- July 3 1863)
- Three day battle app. 50.000 casualties
- Union army defeats Confederate army
- (led by General Robert E. Lee)
Photograph Timothy H. O'Sullivan, July 56, 1863
17Abraham Lincoln Gettysburg Address November 19,
1863
Transcription of the Gettysburg Address
inscribed on the walls at the Lincoln Memorial
in Washington, D.C.
18The slave narrative genre
- For example
- Frederick Douglass
- The Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass
(1845), early example of African-American
Literature, the former slave Douglass tells about
his escape from Maryland to Massachusetts and
about his liberation through education. - Harriet Jacobs Incidents in the Life of a Slave
Girl (1861), outspokenly condemned the sexual
exploitation of slave women
19American Literary Renaissance
With only five years, 1850-55, several American
writers publish their most famous
works Nathanial Hawthorne The Scarlett Letter
(1850) Herman Melville Moby Dick (1851) Henry
David Thoreau Walden (1854) Walt Whitman Leaves
of Grass (1855) Broadening the scope one could
also add Edgar Allan Poe (1809-49) Ralph Waldo
Emerson (1803-82) Emily Dickinson (1830-86)
20Nathaniel Hawthorne(1804-1864)
Young Goodman Brown (1835)
- many stories are situated in Puritan New
England (his grandfather being a judge of the
Salem Witchtrials 1692) - themes of morality, sin, and redemption
- Hawthorne called his writing "romance
historical settings and plots highly symbolic,
almost phantasmagorical worlds