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  • Slide 1
  • American Visions, American Stories: The Puritan World View and Early American Literature English 441 Dr. Roggenkamp
  • Slide 2
  • America... A Nation of Stories America built upon stories Not founded on geographical or linguistic unityimmigrant, native experiences Stories or ideologies impart unity to diverse people and experiences Published works, political rhetoric, press determine which stories become legitimate and definitive Role of colonial, early Republic experience in shaping stories
  • Slide 3
  • Dominant stories & patterns emerge from European settlement in America Story of Diversity Story of Individualism Story of Expansionism & Colonialism (and Exploitation) Story of Capitalism Story of Exceptionalism
  • Slide 4
  • Dominant stories & patterns emerge from English settlement in America Story of Diversity: Not a single experience or single story Diversified socially, religiously, racially, ethnically, etc.
  • Slide 5
  • Dominant stories & patterns emerge from English settlement in America Story of Individualism: America as a place to go it alone Not tied to old European alliances, traditions
  • Slide 6
  • Dominant stories & patterns emerge from English settlement in America Story of Expansionism & Colonialism (and Exploitation) Right & even God-given duty to spread across continent Civilize the wildernessand anyone who already lives there
  • Slide 7
  • Dominant stories & patterns emerge from English settlement in America Story of Capitalism America as a place where personal wealth available Reward for leading godly life Image: John Winthrop, Governor, Massachusetts Bay Company
  • Slide 8
  • Dominant stories & patterns emerge from English settlement in America Story of Exceptionalism America as an exception to the normal state of nationsan exceptional people America as beacon to humanity: a Peculiar Chosen Peoplethe Israel of our time (Herman Melville)
  • Slide 9
  • Image: Embarkation of the Pilgrims, Robert W. Weir, U. S. Capitol Building, 1837
  • Slide 10
  • AND NOW FOR A QUIZ! (adapted from PBS series Colonial House) True or False: The first European colony in the New World was one founded by the English in what is now Virginia (Jamestown, of Captain John Smith and Pocahontas fame).
  • Slide 11
  • FALSE The Spanish founded the first permanent colony at St. Augustine (Florida) in 1565 The first colony in Virginia was Jamestown, founded by the English in 1607 The Dutch founded New Amsterdam (New York) in 1608 English pilgrims arrive in Plymouth (Massachusetts) in 1620, and English Puritans in Boston/Salem area 1630 Image: Map depicting destruction of St. Augustine, 1586
  • Slide 12
  • True or False? The Pilgrims and Puritans usually wore black and white clothing
  • Slide 13
  • False Black cloth was expensive and hard to obtain, so only wealthier Pilgrims and Puritans owned it, and they saved it for Sundays and special occasions They usually wore beige, gray, green, red, blue, and purple The buckles on shoes and hats are an invention of nineteenth- century illustrators Image: From PBS series Colonial House
  • Slide 14
  • True or False? English colonists came to the new world seeking religious freedom.
  • Slide 15
  • Only very partially true. Some, like Pilgrims of Mayflower fame, came seeking religious freedom as primary objective But even the Puritans of Salem and Boston had many motivations, not just religiouslargely POLITICAL Most colonists came believing there was money to be madeand investors came to oversee their valuable property Some came just for adventure Image: Wealthy English adventurer
  • Slide 16
  • True or False? An "Indian princess" named Pocahontas rescued early colonist Captain John Smith from certain death and later fell in love with him.
  • Slide 17
  • False, but a Fetching Story (Sorry, Walt Disney) Pocahontas, daughter of Algonquian Indian chief, was 11-12 when the Virginia Company, led by Captain John Smith, arrived to found Jamestown colony Smith wrote that he was kidnapped by Indians, who took him to their village to club him to death Pocahontas ran in and saved his life Kidnapping and mock death threat likely part of tribal adoption ritual Smith embroidered story about her saving himreported that Indian women saved his life on other occasions as well
  • Slide 18
  • Colors of the wind, etc. etc. Little evidence to suggest romantic relationship between Smith and Pocahontas Pocahontas later married colonist John Rolfe and traveled to England to meet King James I Died at the age of 22 and was buried in a churchyard in Gravesend, England Image: Depictions of Pocahontas
  • Slide 19
  • True or False? Early colonists celebrated the first Thanksgiving in November 1621, and it has been an annual holiday in North America ever since
  • Slide 20
  • False. ( Sorry, schoolchildren of America.) Sometime during fall 1621, the 50% of Pilgrims who survived the first winter in Plymouth Colony held harvest celebration with feasting and games. Menu: lobster and eel But not called "Thanksgiving" Image: 1914 depiction of the "First Thanksgiving"
  • Slide 21
  • Welcome to Turkey-ville No one associated the Pilgrims with "Thanksgiving until William Bradfords account of the 1621 harvest festival was discovered and published in 1841. In 1863 Abraham Lincoln proclaimed annual Day of Thanksgiving on the last Thursday of November. By end of nineteenth century when "Wild West" was settled, white Americans felt comfortable enough with idea of Pilgrim forefathers dining with friendly Indians, and the Pilgrims became identified with the holiday.
  • Slide 22
  • True or False? Early English colonists developed strict laws and harsh punishments for those who broke them.
  • Slide 23
  • Wickedly True Elaborate system of laws, fines, punishments, public humiliations to keep order Plymouth Colony: could be put to death for murder, witchcraft, arson, rape, adultery, sodomy Public whipping or being placed in public stocks Fines for cursing, missing church, lying, defying parents Offenders could be forced wear badges or cloth letters identifying crimes (The Scarlet Letter, anyone?)
  • Slide 24
  • True or False? The Puritans and Pilgrims viewed alcohol and tobacco as instruments of the devil and banned them from the colonies. And they NEVER engaged in (ahem) adult relations before marriage!
  • Slide 25
  • False, now pour me another one EVERYONE (even children) drank alcoholic beveragesunpurified water could cause illness and death But frowned upon excessive consumption and public drunkenness (might lead to having to wear red D [for drunkard] around his neck for a year) Smoking also wide-spread, though dangerous (fire) Up to 40% of Puritan babies were conceived before the ring was on the finger http://www.history.org/foundation/journal/ho liday07/court.cfm http://www.history.org/foundation/journal/ho liday07/court.cfm
  • Slide 26
  • True or False? Early English colonists such as the Pilgrims and Puritans introduced Christian holidays such as Christmas and Easter to North America.
  • Slide 27
  • They would be HORRIFIED to know that many people today think this is true! Only three holidays approved: Sabbath, days of thanksgiving, and fast days Christmas and Easter viewed as pagan in origin (technically true both holidays drew upon and incorporated pagan rituals and symbols), and as holidays constructed by the Church of England and the Roman Catholic Church In addition, marriage viewed as a civil union, not a religious sacrament
  • Slide 28
  • True or False? Enslaved Africans arrived in Colonial America before the Mayflower did.
  • Slide 29
  • True In 1619 a Dutch ship carrying 20 Africans to be sold arrived in Jamestown (Virginia) Additionally, the majority of America's first colonists were white indentured servants (voluntarily came to the colonies, signing a contract pledging four to eight years of servitude in exchange for passage to New World) Image: Eighteenth-century etching of slave ship Brookes, detailing packing of human "cargo"
  • Slide 30
  • Why use Puritanism & New England culture as a base for semester? Ideal of universal literacy Printing culture Influence of ideology on early American literature & beyond Influence of ideology on national character today Establishes several stories of what America meansbut not THE story! Image: Still shot from PBS series Colonial House, 2004
  • Slide 31
  • Before the Puritans... Native American cultures: pre-contact, approx 300 million people, 300+ separate indigenous cultures, 800 languages spoken Mostly oral literaturebut where American Literature really does begin Colonizing by Spanish, French, Dutch, and English, in both South (Virginia) and North (New England) First permanent European settlement on North American continent: Spanish at St. Augustine (Florida, 1565) English: Jamestown (Virginia) 1607 Literature produced by colonists and printed in colonies begins 1639, with press set up by Puritans of Massachusetts Bay (Boston)
  • Slide 32
  • What does Puritan mean? Originally meant as an insult: label for those who opposed compromises Queen Elizabeth I made with Catholic church Both a religious, theological label and a political, cultural label Way of grouping together very diverse set of belief systems religious, political, social Not a single, stable, static group of people Most common context: Congregationalists, Calvinists Image: The Puritan, Augustus Saint-Gaudens, Springfield, Mass. 1883.
  • Slide 33
  • Puritanism Roots Label Puritan emerges 16 th century European Protestant reformation of Christianity reform Roman Catholic Church (THE Christian Church) 1530s England Henry VIII parts with Catholic Church to form Church of England (Anglican) His government still a POLITICAL THEOCRACYbelief in government by divine guidance One official state religion, intolerant of others (crime of heresy)
  • Slide 34
  • Puritanism Roots, 2 Believe Henry and successors havent gone far enough in wiping out Catholic influence in England / Church of England Purify Church of England get back to basics of what they think Christianity is about, including: Follow only the Christian Bible Destroy influence of educated priesthoodindividual path to God without intercession of priest (literacy) Ban Catholic sacraments / rituals Ban altars, images, priesthood, convents, etc. Ban pagan holidays like Christmas, Easter Image: St. Marys Anglican Church, Northumberland
  • Slide 35
  • Puritans: Separatists and Non-Separatists Most Puritans simply want to PURIFY Church of England, not break with it / separate from it (Non-Separatist Puritans) Simply want to fix Churchtoo close to Catholic roots Some, though, think Church (and by connection government of England) is beyond fixing (Separatist Puritans, or Pilgrims) Purify Christianity by separating from established church Radical political offense! Image: Thomas Smith, Self Portrait, circa 1680
  • Slide 36
  • Basic World View (Theology) Most Puritans who come to New England in 17 th century are CALVINISTS (Congregationalists) CatholicsMaryland, Virginia, Rhode Island, initially AnglicansVirginia, initially QuakersPennsylvania (late 17 th c.) John Calvin, Swiss Protestant reformer, 1509-1564 Theology: about an interlocking system of COVENANTS (laws, legally binding agreements between God and humanity) Image: John Calvin
  • Slide 37
  • Covenant of Works God promised Adam/Eve and all their descendants eternal life if they obeyed his law; Adam/Eve accepted this promise (covenant) Humanity thus responsible for earning salvation via works (things they DO / way they ACT) Adam/Eve broke covenant God totally justified in condemning all humanity to eternal damnation from that point on
  • Slide 38
  • Covenant of Grace God totally just, but also totally merciful New covenant with Abraham in Bibles Old Testament scriptures: I will be your God and you will be my people. Christian Bibles New Testament: Christs death fulfills Gods end of covenant crucifixion atones for damnation of humanity Image: Rembrandt, The Angel Stopping Abraham from Sacrificing Isaac to God, 1835
  • Slide 39
  • Covenant of Grace, 2 Calvin: God offers salvation not to all humanity per se, but to select group: the elect No one knows who is elect and who is not Must have more than intellectual faith that you MAY be elect must have spiritual, emotional, moving faith, total devotion to God, church, state Constantly watch for signs that youve been offered the covenant of grace Doctrine of preparationism Image: Last Judgement, Sanctuary Notre-Dame des Fontaines, La Brigue, France
  • Slide 40
  • Social Covenant Idea of covenant organizes Puritan civic life: King/Queen of England not in charge of church governance Individual church congregations enter into own covenants with each other and govern themselves Church and government of colonies also enter into covenantstheocracy Extremely threatening to English monarchy Conformity in all aspects of life: Heres our contract with God and each other. Quashes dissent: break covenant & youre out of church, land, community Image: General Laws and Liberties of the Massachusetts Colony, 1672
  • Slide 41
  • The Appeal; or, Whats In It For Me? Covenant system very delicately balancedinherent drama Those not Puritan definitely not elected Be part of exceptional group Belief world about to endPuritans to make way for return of Christ Emotional charge extremely charismatic religion Social pressures economic pressures Not just about religion also all about politics and social order Sense of order and community in totally disordered / fractured world Image: Richard Mather
  • Slide 42
  • Massachusetts Coast (modern)
  • Slide 43
  • Of Pilgrims and Puritans: Whats the difference? In some sense, all Pilgrims are Puritans, but not all Puritans are Pilgrims Most Puritans are happy to keep the Church of Englandsimply want to PURIFY it by working from within (Winthrop, Bradstreet, Boston/Massachusetts Bay Co., est. 1630) Pilgrims are radical Puritans Church of England has to go beyond salvation (Bradford, Plymouth Plantation, est. 1620) Image: Facsimile of Bradfords manuscript for Of Plymouth Plantation
  • Slide 44
  • Of Pilgrims and Puritans, 2 Separatists Separate from Church of England and therefore from England itself Social outcasts radical, subversive, persecuted Of Mayflower and First Thanksgiving fame (a myth) Image: First Thanksgiving, Jean Louise Gerome Ferris, early 20 th C.
  • Slide 45
  • William Bradford, 1590-1657 Separatist Puritans (Pilgrims) to Plymouth, 1620 Group most persecuted in England Most radical, extreme views Images: William Bradford; contemporary reconstruction of Plymouth Plantation homes
  • Slide 46
  • John Winthrop, 1588-1649 Member of English landed gentry; attorney 1629 joins other investors to organize trading companyMassachusetts Bay Company Unlike most other colonial enterprises, this one not just about making profit Leads Great Migration to New England (1630-1650) Image: John Winthrop
  • Slide 47
  • Winthrop and 17 th -Century Puritanism: The Ideal and the Real What are Winthrops and Bradfords ideals all about? What reality does Winthrops private journal and Bradfords history show in contrast to the ideal? Image: Royal Charter, Massachusetts Bay Company, 1629
  • Slide 48
  • Figures and typology Puritan literature explicates prophecies of Biblical Old Testament as foreshadowing of events and peoplefirst in the New Testament, then in contemporary life (by 1640s) Biblical forecasts of current events E.g.: Atlantic journey of Puritans is antitype of Exodus of Israelites, the chosen people (the type). Image: The First Thanksgiving, Jenny Brownscombe, Pilgrim Hall Museum, 1920.
  • Slide 49
  • Figures and typology: Story of American Exceptionalism Individuals are chosenthe elect But COMMUNITY as whole is people chosen of God as well New Israelites (Puritans) sent on errand into the wilderness to establish the new Jerusalem in anticipation of Christs return