Table of Contents
- 1. Beginnings: Land, Voice, and Colonial Visions
- 2. Puritanism & The Salem Witch Trials
- 3. Print Culture in a Multilingual Landscape
- 4. Politics & The Pen: Evolution of Democratic Thought
- 5. The Great Awakening & American Enlightenment
- 6. Match the List: Key Exam Concepts
- 7. Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
American literature did not begin with the printing press; it was born in the rich oral traditions of Indigenous cultures and forged in the crucible of colonial expansion, religious fervor, and revolutionary ideology. For the UGC NET exam, understanding this chronological progression from pre-colonial myth to Enlightenment prose is crucial.
1. Beginnings: Land, Voice, and Colonial Visions
Long before colonial ink touched paper, Indigenous cultures thrived with rich oral traditions. Myths, such as that of Sky Woman, shaped cosmological identity. The oral tradition was not merely a set of texts, but "a mode of knowing and transmitting knowledge."
Sir Walter Raleigh
English explorers imagined America as a symbolic space. Raleigh famously described the virgin terrain as "a country that hath yet her maidenhead."
John Smith
Initiated the trajectory of reportage. Authored A True Relation (1608) which glorified colonization, and The Generall Historie (1624) urging expansion.
William Bradford
A central figure in the Plymouth Colony (1620). His work, Of Plymouth Plantation, marked the Anglican break and blended historical reportage with typology.
2. Puritanism & The Salem Witch Trials
The Puritans envisioned a covenantal moral community under God. John Winthropβs famous sermon cast the new world as "a city upon a hill." This strict, theocratic order eventually gave way to profound cultural anxieties.
The Crucible of Puritan Anxiety (1692)
The Salem Witch Trials (1692β1693) π Asked in Exam
The trials mixed superstition, factionalism, and covenantal theology. Over 200 were accused and 19 executed publicly. It represented a deep Puritan anxiety over moral and social deviation.
- Exam Key Concept: "Witchcraft accusations in New England were a form of social control, often used against women who stood outside the boundaries of acceptable behavior" π Asked in Exam.
- While no major literary works emerged immediately from the trials, they symbolized guilt and collective paranoia, prefiguring themes of intolerance in later American literature.
3. Print Culture in a Multilingual Landscape
Seventeenth-century America was not purely English; it boasted a multilingual literary topography where Spanish, French, Dutch, and German traditions coexisted.
- Pennsylvaniaβs first printed item appeared in German.
- Colonial printers enjoyed relative autonomy compared to their counterparts in England.
- The Bay Psalm Book (1640): Recognized as the earliest printed book in America.
- Anne Bradstreetβs The Tenth Muse (1650): Blended rigid Puritan theology with a distinctly personal, domestic tone.
- Mary Rowlandson (1682): Her captivity narrative transformed private affliction into a public text, establishing a uniquely American genre.
4. Politics & The Pen: Evolution of Democratic Thought
As the colonies expanded, literature wrestled with authority, scripture, and freedom. The shift from divine governance to civil rights was documented by key figures:
Roger Williams
Opposed the fusion of church and state. In The Bloudy Tenent, he famously argued for "a hedge or wall of separation between the garden of the church and the wilderness of the world."
John Dickinson
Amidst rising unrest following the Stamp Act (1765), his Letters from a Farmer in Pennsylvania urged colonial unity against British overreach.
Thomas Jefferson
The Declaration of Independence affirmed the Enlightenment ideal that "all men are created equal" and entitled to "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness."
5. The Great Awakening & American Enlightenment
"Enlightenment philosophy fused with eloquence, transforming prose into a powerful vehicle for civic action and democratic revolution."
The Great Awakening
The 18th century saw a shift away from strict Puritan orthodoxy. However, figures like Jonathan Edwards revived religious fervor. His famous sermon, "Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God" π Asked in Exam, is a cornerstone of Great Awakening literature.
The American Enlightenment (1765β1790)
Inspired by Locke and Montesquieu, the American Enlightenment emphasized reason, reform, and rational self-virtue. Literature was deliberately framed as a civic and political tool.
- Benjamin Franklin: Authored Poor Richardβs Almanack and his Autobiography, embodying moderation and rational self-improvement.
- Thomas Paine: Ignited revolutionary fervor with Common Sense (1776) π Asked in Exam. He denounced the monarchy as a moral absurdity, stating, "Government, even in its best state, is but a necessary evil."
6. Match the List: Key Exam Concepts
7. Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
What was the primary difference in tone between Benjamin Franklin and Thomas Paine?
Both were key figures of the American Enlightenment, but they utilized different rhetorical strategies. Franklin embodied moderation, pragmatism, and rational self-virtue (e.g., his Autobiography). Paine was a radical provocateur whose fiery rhetoric in Common Sense was designed to spark immediate revolution.
How did the Salem Witch Trials impact American literature?
While no major literary works were published immediately during the trials, the event symbolized deep Puritan guilt, repression, and collective paranoia. It became a foundational cultural trauma that later American writers (most famously Arthur Miller in The Crucible) would revisit to explore themes of intolerance and hysteria.
Why is Mary Rowlandson significant in early American literature?
Her 1682 publication established the "captivity narrative," a uniquely American genre. As scholars note, she "transformed private affliction into a public text," blending personal trauma with Puritan theology to interpret her survival as a sign of divine providence.