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THE FIRES OF PERFECTION. Culture and Reform American History through 1865. Two basic impulses: Optimistic faith in human nature Desire for order and control New Types of Literature & Art Romanticism Nationalism Attempts at reconnecting religion to social life 2nd Great Awakening
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THE FIRES OF PERFECTION Culture and Reform American History through 1865
Two basic impulses: Optimistic faith in human nature Desire for order and control New Types of Literature & Art Romanticism Nationalism Attempts at reconnecting religion to social life 2nd Great Awakening Utopian societies/New religious movements New Social Movements Constructing a place for women in American society Underlying all change - Why this reform movement at this time? What are the sources of America’s attempts at reform?
Or, Why this thing at this time? Sudden rise in immigration - especially foreign born Urbanization Industrialization So, what is being changed or reformed? Society Later – smaller groupings in society Communities Religion Prisons/Asylums Economic system Politics How was society changing that resulted in reform movements?
New communities & New Religions Oneida - Shakers - Ann Lee Mormons – Joseph Smith/Brigham Young Socialists - New Harmony - Robert Owen Transcendentalism- Brook Farm Reforming social ills Prohibition/temperance Public Health Politics Reforming or creating institutions Schools Free public education Women’s institutions Asylums Orphanages Hospitals Reservations Jails Reform Rehabilitation Punishment Pennsylvania System From perfecting society to perfecting portions of society
How did we express ourselves? • Art • Literature • Romanticism • Naturalism • Expressions of the reforming impulse
American Romanticism • Emerson and Transcendentalism • Transcendentalist ideas • Emergence of American literature • The Clash between Nature and Civilization • Cooper and wilderness • Thoreau and individualism • Songs of the Self-Reliant and Darker Loomings • Whitman and democracy • Melville and nature’s destructive power
Thomas Cole The Course of Empire: The Pastoral State Catskill Scenery
Literature • Washington Irving • James Fenimore Cooper • Walt Whitman • Herman Melville • Nathaniel Hawthorne • Edgar Allan Poe • Beverly Tucker • William Alexander Caruthers • Augustus B. Longstreet • Mark Twain
Transcendentalism creating a spiritual movement outside of church with the assistance of ministers transform society via the individual rather than via institutions Reason & Understanding Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry David Thoreau, Bronson Alcott Brook Farm George Ripley Destroyed by fire 1847 Charles Fourier Amana Utopian Thought
Religious Reforms • The 2nd Great Awakening • Charles Grandison Finney • ideal of perfectionism • Mormons • Shakers • Overlapping issues • reform society • social reform results in individual improvement • individual improvement results in perfect societies
Revivalism and the Social Order • Finney’s New Measures • Charles Finney • Conversion experience • The Philosophy of the New Revivals • Free will and perfectionism • Transformation of Protestantism • Religion and the Market Economy • Finney’s Rochester revival • Revivalism’s appeal to the middle class • Workers and church membership • Revivalism and the Social Order • The Significance of the Second Great Awakening • Evangelicalism bolsters individualism and equality
Revivalism and the Social Order The Rise of African American Churches Bishops of the African Methodist Episcopal Church, Library of Congress
What were the two basic impulses of reform and how did they appear to contradict each other? What were the new Types of Literature & Art appearing in America? How do they reflect a new idea of who we were? What were the various attempts at reconnecting religion to social life? What other attempts at communal reform took place during this period? Underlying all change - Why this reform movement at this time? Going on - What was the woman’s and the African-American’s (and other non-whites) place in American society? Break then,What are the sources of America’s reforms?
Women’s Sphere • Women and Revivalism • Women’s changing lives • The Ideals of Domesticity • “Sisterhood” and social networks • The Middle-Class Family in Transition • Decline in the birthrate
Rise of Feminism • 1830s & 1840s – period of rising anti-woman legislation in the north but increasing pro-woman legislation in the south • Why this time? • Industrialization • Competition for jobs • Immigration • Women reformers • Grimké sisters • Beecher sisters • Lucretia Mott • Elizabeth Cady Stanton • Dorothea Dix
Womens’ lives in the 1830 defined by: work, domesticity, education, religion, sisterhood Cult of domesticity- leisured (middle) class women vs. working class women entangles women in changes in the work place/where work & business are conducted moves women out of the public sphere and into the private (women’s sphere) domestication of the family Where could women exercise a public role? Church school/children’s institutions caring for the poor, sick, insane, imprisoned The women’s sphere
Organizations & Impetus for female reform • Troy Female Seminary, 1821 • Hartford Female Seminary, 1823 • World Anti-Slavery Conference, London, 1840 • Seneca Falls Convention, 1848 • Declaration of Sentiments
Abolitionism • The Beginnings of the Abolitionist Movement • Free blacks oppose colonization • Garrison’s immediatism • The Spread of Abolitionism • Geography of abolitionism • Lane Seminary rebellion • Black abolitionists • Opponents and Divisions • Divisions among abolitionists • Abolitionism • The Schism of 1840
Abolitionists William Lloyd Garrison - radical The Liberator, 1831 Theodore Dwight Weld - moderate American Anti-Slavery Society, 1833 Escaped slaves Frederick Douglass Harriet Tubman Converts Sarah Grimké, Angelina Grimké, James Birney Initial Abolitionists
White Abolitionists • Early opposition – repatriation of slaves • ACS – American Colonization Society • Gradual Abolition (Gradualism) • Benjamin Lundy – Genius of Universal Emancipation • Immediate Abolition • William Lloyd Garrison & The Liberator • American Antislavery Society (AAS) • Theodore Dwight Weld
Black Abolitionists • David Walker, Boston, 1829 “Walker’s Appeal . . .to the Colored Citizens” • “kill or be killed” • Frederick Douglass • Newspaper – North Star • Biography – Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass
Anti-Abolition • Dangerous & threatening • Increasing violence against abolitionists • Garrison, Boston, MA, 1835 • Elijah Lovejoy, Alton, IL, 1837 • Extreme response to militant action?
Abolition Divided • Growing radicalism of Garrison • Split AAS in 1840 • 1843 – called for disunion from south over slavery • Embracing violence • Moderate position • “moral suasion” • Amistad case • Rise of the Liberty Party – 1840 • James G. Birney • Free soil not abolition • Publications • American Slavery as It Is: Testimony of a Thousand Witnesses (1839) • Uncle Tom’s Cabin (1851-52)
Leaders - but they couldn’t speak in public Lucretia Mott (abolition then women’s rights) Liaisons to other movements Sarah Grimké, Angelina Grimké (abolition, education, and women’s rights) Created new movements Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Lucy Stone, Seneca Falls convention (1848) Exceptions - when women were caring for others Dorthea Dix Women’s roles in the reform movements
Elijah Lovejoy - first man killed for abolition gag law Liberty Party - 1840 Political Responses
Reform Shakes the Party System • Women and the Right to Vote “Why shall [women] be left only the poor resource of petition? For even petitions, when they are from women, without the elective franchise to give them backbone, are but of little consequence.” -The Lily
Reform Shakes the Party System • The Maine Law • Struggle over prohibition • Abolitionism and the Party System • Censorship of the mails • Gag rule
Lyman Beecher and the Lane Seminary Romanticism Political reform Making the private public Overarching relationships