Lecture1 - The Beginnings - Early Explorers and Settlers
Lecture1 - The Beginnings - Early Explorers and Settlers
Lecture1 - The Beginnings - Early Explorers and Settlers
In these letters, the writers speak of their di culties, of the danger they had to face, but also of the
wonders that were to be seen every where.
William Bradford outlines the plight of the "Pilgrim Fathers", landing at Polymouth in 1620 "Being thus
passed the vast ocean, and a sea of troubles before in their preparation ,they had now no
friends ........"
Thus, the earliest American writers were really European writers living in America; and even though
they might have left Europe a long time ago, their writing was clearlyin uenced by European writers,
and for the most part, was merely an information of European, and in particular English, literature.
The spirit of nationalism was totally lacking, but the literature of a people springs from this feeling of
nationalism. The did not feel the urge to create. This yrge was felt only after the declartion of
Independence, and then Literature in America took rapid strides forward, and came to its own by the
turn of the 18th Century. These early settlers were largely Puritans, who regaeded imaginative
literature- poetry, novel and drama- as a life and consequently it was discouraged and looked draw
upon.
However, all this does not mean that, there was no literarture in the colonial period, or that it is entirely
worthless, and that is a wsate of time to study it. It is wrong to say that the study of American Literature
should begin with the 18th century, and the literature of the colonial period should be ignored. On the
contrary, this early literature is of great worth and signi cance historically, though it may not be so very
signi cant as literature. This early Colonists were writing in a new setting and their writings give an account
not only of their hardship and suffering but also of their joy and pride in the greatness and glory of their
new environment.
Their accounts of travel, the description of the land, faithful reports of colonial life, throb with pride in
what they were doing. They re ect the aspirations and hopes, the trials and the set-backs, of those
who were ghting aganist the wilderness. It is in these early writings that we nd how the nation
grew. Colonial American Literature depicts the dangerous adventures, the hard works and di cult
decesions that went into the process of building a nation. In the pages of these early books we
discover the basic ingredients of the American character, courage, industry and optimism,. "The
hardship of living conditions, (The Red) Indian attacks, sickness and starvation, are from the
beginning re ected in the pages of Smith, Bradford and Winthrop. That despite innumerable dangers,
the colonists ourished is a tribute to their courage and tenacity. Their writings, terefore, from an
important part of American literary history. Hence it is only sensible that a student of American
literary history. Hence, it is only sensible that a student of american literary thought should trace it
from the very beginning".
The early colonial literature, "became a great reservior of material and inspiration for the 19th
century, for readers it still provides an understanding of those bedrock American experiences which
developed the national character and our peculiary American institution". To understand the
American literary tradition, we have to go back to early colonial literature. This has its revelance even
today for the student of American thought and literature.
This urge to write for the greatness and glory of God produced, "a volumeinous literature composed
of sermons, diaries and biographies and poems of a religious nature. Further, it were these early
Puritans who founded the Havard College, as early as 1636, and also the rst printing press a few
years later in 1639. Thus they sowed the seeds which later ourished and bore fruits.
Religious writing also assumed the form of 1. diary and 2. auto-biography. Winthrop's journal,
Samuel Sewall's diary, the travel journal of Mrs.Sarah Kemble Knight are among the treasured diaries
of this period. Temporal concerns, like food and drink, social life, births, marriages, deaths, nd there
way into these day-to day records which recreate for the modern reader a vivid picture of 17th and
18th century American life.
Spiritual auto-biographies are closely allied to the diaries and they, too, from a large part of this early
literature. Jonathan Edward's 'Personal Narratives' is the best of the species. Benjami Frankline's
'Autobiography', John Woolman's 'Journals' are two other great literary works in this tradition.
This literature of travel and exploration forms interesting reading even to-day. It gives us a peep into
the very soul of these early settlers. The greatest work of this type is Cotton Mather's monomental
work "Magnalia Christi American", published in 1702. It describes the Golden Era of Puritanism
before its decline.
Image Modernism and Literature:- Created By Master Dibakar Poddar Henri Matisse, The
Dance, 1910, Hermitage Museum, St. Petersburg, Russia. At the beginning of the 20th
century Henri Matisse and several other young artists including the pre-cubist Georges …
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