LITERARY PERIODS IN
AMERICAN LITERATURE
AN OUTLINEAMERICAN
AN OUTLINEAMERICAN
LITERATURE
LITERATURE
Puritan Times 1650-1750
Content: Errand into the wilderness; be a
city upon a hill;
Christian utopia
Genre/Style: sermons, diaries; personal
narratives; captivity; narratives jeremiads;
written in plain style
Effect: instructive reinforces authority of
the Bible and church
Historical Context: a person's fate is
determined by God all people are corrupt
and must be saved by Christ
Puritan writers stressed
religious
and didactic themes
The first book published in America was the
Bay Psalm Book: The Whole Book of Psalmes
Faithfully Translated into English Metre
(1640).
AUTHORS: William Bradford (1590/1657)
History of Plymouth Plantation (pub. 1856);
John Smith (1579/1631) The Generall
Historie of Virginia (1624) William Byrd
(1674/1744) History of the Dividing Line
(composed and reworked from 1728 but not
published until 1841).
Jonathan Edwards(1703-1758) “Sinners in
the hand of an angry God”
Rationalism/ Age of Enlightenment 1750-
1800
Content: national mission and American character
democratic utopia use of reason history is an act of
individual and national self-assertion
Genre/Style: political pamphlets; travel writing;
highly ornate writing style; fiction employs generic
plots and characters; fiction often tells the story of
how an innocent young woman is tested by a
seductive male
Effect: patriotism grows; instills pride; creates
common agreement about issues; shows differences
between Americans and Europeans
Historical Context: tells readers how to interpret
what they are reading to encourage Revolutionary
War support instructive in values
Authors
Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790) "first great man of
letters," embodied the Enlightenment ideal of humane
rationality. Practical yet idealistic, hard-working and
enormously successful, Franklin recorded his early life in
his famous Autobiography.
Hector St. John de Crèvecoeur (1735-1813)
Another Enlightenment figure is Hector St. John de
Crèvecoeur, whose Letters from an American Farmer (1782)
gave Europeans a glowing idea of opportunities for peace,
wealth, and pride in America.
Thomas Paine (1737-1809) pamphlet Common Sense
Washington Irving (1789-1859) The Devil and Tom
Walker; The Legend of the Sleep Hollow; Rip Van Winkle
James Fenimore Cooper (1789-1851) The Last of the
Mohicans
American Renaissance/Romanticism 1800-1855
Content: writing that can be interpreted 2 ways, on the
surface for common folk or in depth for philosophical
readers; sense of idealism focus on the individual's inner
feelings; emphasis on the imagination over reason and
intuition over facts; urbanization versus nostalgia for
nature burden of the Puritan past
Genre/Style: literary tale; character sketch; slave
narratives; political novels; poetry; transcendentalism
Effect: helps instill proper gender behavior for men and
women;
fuels the abolitionist movement; allow people to re-
imagine the American past
Historical Context: expansion of magazines; newspapers;
and book publishing; slavery debates
Authors
Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882) essay
"Self-Reliance"
Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862) essay
"Civil Disobedience"
Walt Whitman (1819-1892)
His famous “Leaves
of Grass (Oh! Captain My Captain) ”-1855
and other writers…
Gothic sub-genre of Romanticism 1800-1850
Content: sublime and overt use of the supernatural; individual
characters
see themselves at the mercy of forces our of their control
which they do not understand; motif of the "double": an
individual with both evil and good characteristics often involve
the persecution of a young woman who is forced apart from
her true love
Style: short stories and novels; hold readers' attention through
dread of a series of terrible possibilities; feature landscapes of
dark forests, extreme vegetation, concealed ruins with horrific
rooms, depressed characters
Effect: today in literature we still see portrayals of alluring
antagonists whose evil characteristics appeal to one's sense of
awe; today in literature we still see stories of the persecuted
young girl forced apart from her true love
Historical Context: industrial revolution brings ideas that the
"old ways" of doing things are now irrelevant
AUTHORS
Emily Dickinson (1830-1886) Dickinson's 1,775 poems
continue to intrigue critics, who often disagree about them.
Some stress her mystical side, some her sensitivity to
nature; many note her odd, exotic appeal. One modern
critic, R.P. Blackmur, comments that Dickinson's poetry
sometimes feels as if "a cat came at us speaking English."
Her clean, clear, chiseled poems are some of the most
fascinating and challenging in American literature.
Nathaniel Hawthorne (1804-1864) The House of the
Seven Gables; The Scarlet Letter (1850)
Herman Melville (1819-1891) Moby-Dick
Edgar Allan Poe (1809-1849) "The Raven" (1845);
Annabel Lee; The Bell. Tales of the Grotesque and
Arabesque (1840) : The Black Cat; The Fall of the House of
Usher…
Frederick Douglass (1817-1895) Narrative of the Life of
Frederick Douglass; An American Slave
Realism 1855-1900
Content: common characters not idealized
(immigrants, laborers);
people in society defined by class society corrupted by
materialism;
emphasizes moralism through observation
Style: novel and short stories are important; prefers
objective narrator; dialogue includes many voices from
around the country; does not tell the reader how to
interpret the story
Effect: social realism: aims to change a specific social
problem; aesthetic realism: art that insists on detailing
the world as one sees it
Historical Context: Civil War brings demand for a
"truer" type of literature that does not idealize people
or places
AUTHORS
Samuel Clemens (Mark Twain) (1835-1910) Adventures
of Huckleberry Finn; Life on the Mississippi
Henry James (1843-1916) The Portrait of a Lady (1881);
The Bostonians (1886) …
Stephen Crane (1871-1900) The Red Badge of Courage
Jack London (1876-1916) The Son of the Wolf (1900); The
Call of the Wild (1903) and The Sea-Wolf (1904)
Theodore Dreiser (1871-1945) An American Tragedy
Naturalism (sub-genre of realism) 1880-1900
Content: dominant themes: survival fate violence taboo;
nature is an indifferent force acting on humans; "brute
within" each individual is comprised of strong and warring
emotions such as greed, power, and fight for survival in an
amoral, indifferent world.
Genre/Style: short story, novel; characters usually lower
class or lower middle class; fictional world is commonplace
and unheroic; everyday life is a dull round of daily existence;
characters ultimately emerge to act heroically or
adventurously with acts of violence, passion, and/or bodily
strength in a tragic ending
Effect: this type of literature continues to capture audiences
in present day: the pitting of man against nature
Historical Context: writers reflect the ideas of Darwin
(survival of the fittest) and Karl Marx (how money and class
structure control a nation)
AUTHORS
Gertrude Stein (1874-1946) developed an
abstract, experimental prose poetry. collection
Tender Buttons (1914)
Ernest Hemingway (1899-1961) The Sun
Also Rises(1926)…
F. Scott Fitzgerald (1896-1940) The Great
Gatsby; This Side of Paradise
William Faulkner (1897-1962) The Sound
and the Fury (1929)
Poets: Ezra Pound (1885-1972); T.S. Eliot
(1888-1965); Robert Frost (1874-1963);
Modernism 1900-1946
Content: dominant mood: alienation and
disconnection; people unable to communicate
effectively; fear of eroding traditions and grief over
loss of the past
Genre/Style: highly experimental; allusions in writing
often refer to classical Greek and Roman writings; use
of fragments, juxtaposition, interior monologue, and
stream of consciousness; writers seeking to create a
unique style
Effect: common readers are alienated by this
literature
Historical Context: overwhelming technological
changes of the 20th Century; World War I was the first
war of mass destruction due to technological
advances; rise of the youth culture
Harlem Renaissance (runs parallel to
modernism) 1920s
Content: celebrated characteristics of African-
American life; enjoyment of life without fear; writing
defines the African-American heritage and celebrates
their new identity as Americans
Genre/Style: allusions in writing often refer to
African-American spirituals; uses the structure of
blues songs in poetry (ex-repetition of key phrases) ;
superficial stereotypes later revealed to be characters
capable of complex moral judgments
Effect: this period gave birth to a new form of
religious music called "gospel music“; blues and jazz
are transmitted across America via radio and
phonographs
Historical Context: mass African-American migration
to Northern urban centers. African-Americans have
more access to media and publishing outlets after
they move north.
Authors
Harlem Renaissance:
Jean Toomer (1894-1967) Cane (1923)
Richard Wright (1908-1960) his autobiography
Black Boy (1945);Native Son (1940)
Zora Neale Hurston (1903-1960) Mules and Men
(1935)
Toni Morrison (1931- ) Beloved (1987)
Modernism 1900-1946
Sinclair Lewis (1885-1951) Babbitt (1922).
John Dos Passos (1896-1970) The 42nd Parallel
(1930), 1919 (1932), and The Big Money (1936).
John Steinbeck (1902-1968) The Grapes of Wrath
(1939); Of Mice and Men(1937)
Postmodernism 1946-Present
Content: people observe life as the media presents it,
rather than experiencing life directly; popular culture
saturates people's lives;
absurdity and coincidence
Genre/Style: mixing of fantasy with nonfiction; blurs
lines of reality for reader; no heroes; concern with
individual in isolation; detached, unemotional usually
humorless; narratives; metafiction; present tense;
magic realism
Effect: erodes distinctions between classes of people;
insists that values are not permanent but only "local"
or "historical"
Historical Context: Post-World War II prosperity;
media culture interprets values
Contemporary (continuation of
Postmodernism) 1980s-Present
Content: identity politics; people learning to cope with
problems through communication; people's sense of
identity is shaped by cultural and gender attitudes;
emergence of ethnic writers and women writers
Style: narratives: both fiction and nonfiction; anti-
heroes; concern with connections between people;
emotion-provoking; humorous irony; storytelling
emphasized; autobiographical essays
Effect: too soon to tell
Historical Context: people beginning a new century
and a new millennium; media culture interprets values
AUTHORS
James Baldwin (1924-1987) Go Tell It On the Mountain
(1953)
Saul Bellow (1915- ) The Victim (1947)
Eugene O'Neill (1888-1953) Long Day's Journey Into Night
(1956)
Arthur Miller (1915- ) Death of a Salesman
Tennessee Williams (1911-1983) The Glass Menagerie (1944)
and A Streetcar Named Desire (1947).
Katherine Anne Porter (1890-1980) Ship of Fools (1962)
John Updike (1932- ) Rabbit, Run (1960)
Jack Kerouac (1922-1969) On the Road (1957)
Tom Wolfe (1931-) The Right Stuf (1979), and a novel, The
Bonfire of the Vanities (1987)
Philip K. Dick (1928-1982) Do Androids Dream of Electric
Sheep?; Minority Report
Walter Mosley (1952 -) Devil in A Blue Dress (1990) A Red
Death (1991);White Butterfly (1992) Gone Fishin‘(1997); Bad Boy
Brawly Brown (2002)…
Edward Albee (1928- ) Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1962)
ELEMENTS OF FICTION
Plot
Theme
Setting
Characters
Point of View
5 MAJOR ELEMENTS
PLOT
The main point of intrigue or suspense -- what
happens in the story. Unlike the story’s theme
(which can be applied to life situations), the plot
is unique to each story. The plot usually involves
several steps:
EXPOSITION: Introducing the characters,
establishing the setting, and laying the
groundwork for a problem to develop
CONFLICT: the major problem -- may be both
External and Internal
COMPLICATIONS: Just as it says, problems pile
on.
CLIMAX: the highest point of conflict
RESOLUTION: everything winds down to the
conclusion.
THEME
The broader subject or topic of the story.
What type of universal statement is the
author making? What is this story really
about? Is it about the dangers of
jealousy? the consequences of your
decisions or actions? Is the author
concerned
about
nature?
survival?
prejudice? the importance of making
independent decisions?
SETTING
WHEN and WHERE the story occurs. If the
author doesn’t tell you exactly, look for hints.
For example, if it occurs on Mars, chances
are that the story takes place in the future in
space. Be sure to note whether it takes place
in the past, present or future and whether it
takes place on land, in the water, in the air,
or in space. Then add more details to be as
specific as possible. Setting is critical in
establishing the mood (atmosphere) and
making the story and characters credible.
CHARACTERS
In a short story, there may be only one
character. If there are quite a few, chances are
that only one or two are the main characters.
In a novel, there are usually several major
characters as well as several minor characters.
Why are certain characters considered to be
major?
Are the characters static or dynamic (do they
remain the same or do they change?)
Are the characters round (multi-dimensional)
or flat (one-dimensional)?
POINT OF VIEW
This is NOT your opinion of the story. It
refers to who is telling the story. A story
can be told from different points of view.
You are probably most familiar with the
first person (“I”) narrative and with the
omniscient narrative (where the story
changes viewpoint, depending on who is
talking or thinking). Get in the habit of
looking at the point of view; sometimes
you learn more about the story that way