AMERICAN LITERATURE’S COLONIAL ROOTS
THE PURITAN LEGACY
REMEMBER THE PILGRIMS?
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2004
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© 2
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2004
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PILGRIMS AND PURITANS
•The Pilgrims were part of a group of English Puritans called the “Separatists” who fled persecution (including torture and execution) in England.
• The Pilgrims traveled to America aboard the Mayflower and landed at Plymouth in 1620.
•Puritans is a general term for English Protestants who wanted to “purify” the Church of England.
• The Puritans objected to the rituals, decorations, and organization of the Church of England. They wanted a simpler form of worship and organization.
A PURITAN TIME LINE
1620: Mayflower
Pilgrims land at Plymouth
1630: Great migration of Puritans to New England begins
1692: Salem witch
trials
1653–1658: Puritan Oliver Cromwell rules England as lord
protector
1642–1651: English civil
wars between Puritans and
Royalists
1660: Monarchy
restored under Charles II
1608: Separatists flee England for Holland
In England
In America
1600 1700
WHAT THE PURITANS BELIEVED
• Religion is a personal, inner experience.• Humans are wicked by nature, and most are marked
for damnation.• A chosen few can be saved through the grace of God.• Hard work and worldly success are signs of God’s
grace.• Education is essential in order to read the Word of
God.• To be a member of Puritan society, one had to join in
debate and discussion about scripture• Parents concerned about souls of children would teach
youngsters to read and write
GRACE: THE PURITAN IDEAL
• Grace—God’s special favor—was the only way to escape an eternity in Hell.
• People did not know for certain if they had grace, but they could feel the arrival of grace as an intense emotion.
• People who had grace were among the “elect” (saved).
• People who did not have grace were among the “unregenerate” (damned).
GRACE: THE PURITAN IDEAL
• The presence of grace was demonstrated by a person’s outward behavior. People with grace displayed
•self-reliance
•personal responsibility
•industriousness
•temperance
•simplicity
VALUES – SELF-RELIANCE AND INDUSTRIOUSNESS
• Useful because the Puritans in New England had to• Build farms and establish towns in the wilderness• Find their own food and shelter• Make clothes and tools• Figure out how to survive in a new world• Deal with a new climate
Puritan Government
In Theory
•Every individual had an equal covenant with God.
•Laws came from God, as revealed in scripture.
In Practice
•Most people yielded authority to those seen as the saintly “elect.”
•Conformity and obedience took precedence over individual rights.
WHY KINGS GRANTED CHARTERS
• By allowing Puritans to move to America, the British Crown could establish English presence in the New World
• Would also remove political troublemakers from England
Puritan Literature
What the Puritans Read
•The Bible and other religious texts
Why They Read
•Puritans stressed individual responsibility for spiritual development.
•Every person was responsible for reading and understanding the Bible.
Puritan Literature
What the Puritans Wrote
•Sermons, essays, and poems on spiritual and religious subjects
•Diaries and histories that recorded inner and outer events of their lives
Why They Wrote
•Puritans used writing to explore their lives for signs of grace and to describe the workings of God in their communities.
PLAIN STYLE
•Puritans favored a plain style of writing. Plain style is a way of writing that stresses simplicity and clarity of expression. Plain style
• emphasizes uncomplicated sentences and the use of everyday words from common speech
• avoids elaborate figures of speech and imagery
WHY WITCHCRAFT?
• Theology held that Satan was constantly scheming to seduce mankind into evil
• Humans were wicked by nature• Grace could only be recognized by interpreting
signs• Constantly scrutinizing oneself and one’s neighbor
• Without science or modern medicine, unknown symptoms couldn’t be explain• Would lead to hysteria and fear
SALEM: BELIEVERS RUN AMOK
• 1692—Girls suffer from mysterious illness in Salem, Massachusetts.
• Doctors blame witchcraft.• Mass hysteria erupts; neighbors accuse one another.• In the end, about 150 people were accused, and 20
were executed.
WHAT HAPPENED TO THE PURITANS?
• The Age of Faith gradually gave way to the Age of Reason.• Philosophers and scientists stressed the importance of
using reason, rather than religion, to explain how the world operates.
• The Puritans didn’t disappear—their culture was absorbed into the colonial mainstream.
THE PURITAN LEGACY
•In the United States, we generally value• individual rights and responsibilities• equality of individuals• literacy and education• spiritual and worldly rewards for hard work
PURITANISM AND AMERICAN CULTURE
• Still value • individual rights• industriousness• equality• access to public education system• strong work ethic
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