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Early American Literature 1607 - 1848. Characteristics. Puritan beliefs displayed. Example: poetry by Edward Taylor or Anne Bradstreet writer examines relationship with God; OR writer’s ideas reflect Puritan values, like love being more important than wealth;
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Early American Literature1607 - 1848 Characteristics
Puritan beliefs displayed • Example: poetry by Edward Taylor or Anne Bradstreet • writer examines relationship with God; • OR writer’s ideas reflect Puritan values, like love being more important than wealth; • OR work is a sermon or religious tract explaining a belief
Typical early genres • sermon, religious poem, religious tract, diaries or journals • Example: Taylor’s or Bradstreet’s religious poems; Mather’s sermons; Bradford’s history. • By end of 1700s, short fiction also became popular (add this to the options on your worksheet)
Settings firmly grounded in the new world • Story is located in America. • Place names and other details make this clear.
Focus on issues unique to the new world • Revolutionary War & creation of new government • Encounters with Native Americans • Forming new social norms – people don’t have to behave just like they did in Europe • Surviving in a wilder environment • etc.
Concerns about Native Americans • Settlers’ relationship with Native Americans • How should Native Americans be treated? • What are Native Americans like?
Concerns about slavery • Is it acceptable? • What are its consequences?
Developing new social codes and/or a national identity • How should people behave, e.g. • romantic relationships • marriage • status • treatment of Native Americans/slaves • What should the government be like?
Fictional plots are simple; stories are more like sketches • Sketch • prose that describes a scene or character; • not much plot, no conflict, no resolution
Use of realistic dialects • Characters sound like regular people, not aristocrats • How do we identify “realistic”? • Shortened words show natural pronunciation • charg’d, won’t, havin’, whipt • Look for flavoring particles • today you use “like” and “ya know” – what might be the equivalent in the stories you read? • Phonetic spelling of accented English • de = the; ting = thing