Unit One: American Literature in the Settlement Period THE NEW WORLD.
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Transcript of Unit One: American Literature in the Settlement Period THE NEW WORLD.
![Page 1: Unit One: American Literature in the Settlement Period THE NEW WORLD.](https://reader036.fdocuments.us/reader036/viewer/2022070409/56649e7e5503460f94b81a49/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
Unit One: American Literature in the Settlement Period
THE NEW WORLD
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The New World
• 35,000-8,000 BC-Mongolian tribes cross Bering Land Bridge-migrate into N & S America
• Polynesian tribes cross Pacific on rafts-reach S. America
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The Bering Sea
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Native Americans
• Native Americans had diverse and advanced cultures
• Maya, Aztec, Toltec, Inca—all advanced cultures in C. and S. America
• Most cultures did not have written languages
• Cultures rich in myth and oral literature
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Native American Oral Literature
• Oral tradition/oral literature
• Oral Lit-passed down by mouth
• Myths, chants, prayers, stories, histories
• Entertain, educate, pass on culture
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Myths and Mythology• Traditional stories passed
down• Explain nature or human
nature• Teach moral/religious
lessons• Usually have gods and
goddesses• Contain supernatural• Old an modern • Mythology-collected
myths or beliefs
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First Contact
• Vikings land in Newfoundland and Labrador
• Viking deep-sea fisherman and explorers
• First recorded contact-Leif Erikssen-c. 1000 AD
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Marco Polo
• An explorer who followed his father’s trade route
• Route was overland to China
• Brought back silk, spices, exotic goods
• Opened up the West to the East
• Wrote about his travels• Made search for sea trade
route desirable
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Christopher Columbus
• Set sail in 1492 • Sailed west in hopes of
finding trade route to China and the East Indies
• Landed on Hispaniola/Santo Domingo-1492
• Made two other expeditions-found no gold
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Reasons for Exploration of the New World
• Far East trade route• Gold• Claim land/subjects for
the king• Adventure• Jobs (ships, fishing)• Fame and favor• Fountain of Youth/cure for
diseases/Paradise
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Reasons for Settlement of the New World• Gold• Land-to claim for king and
for personal use• Opportunity-work, food,
ownership• Adventure• Money-making • Jobs• Escape from religious
persecution• Escape jail time• Fame
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St. Augustine (FL)
• 1565• First permanent
settlement in the US• Spanish founded it• Near site of “Fountain of
Youth”• Colony and military
outpost• Protected Spanish gold
shipments fr. C. & S. America from pirates
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Jamestown (VA)
• 1607• First permanent English
settlement in US• Founded by the London
Co.• Money-making venture• Captain John
Smith/Pocahantas• Tobacco-cash crop
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Plymouth (MA)
• 1620• Established by Pilgrims
(Puritans)• Escape religious
persecution & cultural pollution in Europe & England
• “City on a Hill”• Example to the world on
how to live
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Important Dates
1492-Columbus lands in NW
1565-Spanish est
St. Augustine
1585-Roanoke VA
“Lost Colony
1607-English est Jamestown
VA
1619-First African slaves
to US
1620-Puritans est Plymouth
MA
1630-Mass Bay Col-”Great Migration”3
1635-First public school in US in Boston
1636-Harvard Univ est in
Boston
1690-Slavery in all colonies
1692-Salem Witch Trials-20
die
1739-1745“Great
Awakening”
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The Puritans
• One of many religious, Protestant sects
• Wanted to “purify”the Church of England
• Was the ruling party in England after Reformation
• Denounced after Restoration of monarchy
• Persecuted under “Bloody Mary”/ James I
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Puritan Beliefs
• Plainness• Divine Mission• Bible-based laws• Grace• “Original Sin”• Physical purgation of
sin• Education for all
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Puritan Beliefs
• Public confession of sin
• The “Elect”• Puritan Work Ethic• Devil Incarnate• Cleanliness• Democratic
government
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Puritan Influence in America
• Writing-Plain Style• Work ethic• Sense of morality• Example to the world• Plainness-dress and
worship styles• Democracy
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The Wilderness
• Major influence on life in colonies
• Forced colonists to be inventive/creative
• Lived closer to nature than Europeans
• Room to grow/resources• Hard to govern-law and
order
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Differences Between Northern and Southern Settlement Styles
Northern• Poorer soil• Colder climate• Shorter growing season• Largely Puritans• Small land grants/small farms• Tight communities built around a “commons” area• Very interdependent
Southern• Better soil• Warmer climate• Longer growing season-cash crops• Largely Church of Eng• Large land grants-plantations-slave labor• Widely dispersed settlements• Very independent
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Puritan Literature
• Plain style-simple words in clear order
(“smooth,clear, short)• God-centered• Spiritual
Autobiographies• Poetry• No plays or fiction
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