collection 1: native american oral traditions collection 2: american narrative tradition collection...
TRANSCRIPT
Collection 1: Native American Oral Traditions
Collection 2: American Narrative Tradition
Collection 3: Political Writing
Unit OneLiterary Focus Essays
Native American Oral Traditions
Collection 1 Literary Focus
Native American Oral Traditions
Where does your image of American Indians come from?
Old Westerns—”cowboy and Indian” movies?
Stories about the first Thanksgiving?
Longfellow’s epic poem The Song of Hiawatha?The Granger Collection, New York
Native American Oral Traditions
Native Americans’ stories have long been told by somebody else.
Until the late 1800s, Western scholars thought American Indians had no literature . . .
. . . and ignored the oral literature passed down over the centuries:
• epic narratives• stories• oratory (speeches)
• songs• poems• chants
A Living Oral Tradition
Native American Oral Traditions
Western literature also has its roots in the oral tradition.
Ancient Western classics such as the Odyssey and Beowulf were told and retold for centuries long before they were written down.
One problem was that scholars had to translate Native American texts from hundreds of different languages.
Native American Oral Traditions
In recent decades, American Indian writers have revitalized their literature by combining
Telling Their Own Stories
• fluency in English
• deep understanding of their own languages and traditions
N. Scott Momaday
Louise Erdrich
Simon J. Ortiz
Leslie Marmon Silko
American Indian Writers
teaches moral lessons and conveys practical information about the natural world.
Native American Oral TraditionsGeneralizations
Despite different languages and cultures, we can make generalizations about these oral traditions:
Native American literature . . .
reflects a more inclusive view of the natural world—a world not dominated by human beings.
shows an awareness of the power of words to make things happen.
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2.
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Many Cultures, A Shared Tradition
Native American Oral TraditionsGeneralizations
After Gluskabe caught all the game animals in the woods, his grandmother made him return them all—much to his dismay. “They’ll die in your bag,” she told him. “That’s not where they live. And then there won’t be any game left for anyone else.”
teaches moral lessons and conveys practical information about the natural world.
Consider this brief retelling of a story from the Abenaki people of Maine:
1.
Native American literature . . .
• greed, and the need to share with others
• the wisdom and knowledge of elders
• game management to preserve food supplies
Native American Oral TraditionsGeneralizations
From a brief tale such as this one, people learned important, life-sustaining lessons about
Native American Oral TraditionsGeneralizations
Animals and humans are often interchangeable in myths and folk tales.
Native American literature . . . reflects a more inclusive view of the natural world—a world not dominated by human beings.2.
Origin myths may feature animals as the instruments of creation.
In Western literature, the universe and the natural world are more typically dominated by humans.
In Native American literature, animals play important roles, often interacting and working together with humans.
Native American Oral TraditionsGeneralizations
Native American Oral TraditionsGeneralizations
Words are powerful and alive. Words can . . .
Native American literature . . .shows an awareness of the power of words to make things happen.3.
. . . destroy an enemy
. . . cure the sick
. . . bring the rain
Passed on from generation to generation, oral traditions preserve historical continuity.
Native American Oral Traditions
But the oral tradition is also dynamic and responsive to change.
In pre-Columbian times…
After the Spanish came…
In modern times…
the Lakota went to the annual Sun Dance on foot.
they went on horseback.
they arrive by automobile.
The Endless Circle of History
In the American Indian worldview, history is an endless circle—like the cycles of the natural world.
Native American Oral Traditions
In the European worldview, history is a straight line.
The “progress” from foot to horse to car is not important.
It’s just another way to get to the same place.
Ask Yourself
1. What three generalizations can you make about American Indian oral traditions?
2. Identify three comparisons between American Indian and Western views of the world.
Native American Oral Traditions
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American Narrative Tradition
Collection 2 Literary Focus
American Narrative Tradition
A narrative is nothing more than a story—but good stories are central to most enduring literature.
When you read narratives, look for
• Who is telling the story
• What he or she wants you to accept or believe
Tales of Life in North America
Travel Narratives
American Narrative Tradition
A Tradition Is Born
The American narrative tradition was born of conflict.
True events—often violent and controversial—were the basis of many narrative accounts in the nation’s early years.
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2
American Narrative Tradition
Travel Narratives1
Few accounts of these grueling journeys survive.
During the sixteenth century, Spain sent several expeditions to conquer and colonize North America.
American Narrative Tradition
In La Relación, Alvar Núñez Cabeza de Vaca provides an exciting, firsthand account of the first European experiences in North America.
One important surviving account, first published in 1542, was originally a report to the Spanish king.
American Narrative Tradition
Tales of Life in North America2
After 1500, European settlers, longing for land and religious freedom, began to arrive.
Narratives by early settlers
• described vast opportunities in the “New World”
• roused Europeans’ imaginations and ambitions
• encouraged new settlers to realize their goals
American Narrative Tradition
William Bradford’s important narrative Of Plymouth Plantation was almost lost to history.
In 1630, Bradford, leader of the Pilgrims after they landed at Plymouth, began an annual account of life in the settlement.
Lost during the Revolutionary War, the document was later rediscovered and published in 1856.
American Narrative Tradition
The Bitter with the Sweet
Captivity Stories3
Slave Narratives4
Not all narratives were glowing advertisements.
Travel and settlement narratives also told of struggle and misfortune.
But two other types of narratives especially reveal the terrors and horrors in the New World.
American Narrative Tradition
Captivity Stories3
As more settlers came, interactions—and friction—between the settlers and Native Americans increased.
“Captivity stories” detailed the experiences of settlers who had been kidnapped by Native Americans.
American Narrative Tradition
Mary Rowlandson’s story is probably one of the most well-known.
A Narrative of the Captivity and Restoration of Mrs. Mary Rowlandson (1682) told of the author’s kidnapping by the Wampanoag.
Widely read for entertainment, such narratives also contributed to the decline of relations between settlers and American Indians.
American Narrative Tradition
Slave Narratives4
Autobiographical accounts by slaves were one of the most influential forms of early American literature.
Many of the accounts tell of the suffering that African slaves endured and of their intense desire for freedom.
American Narrative Tradition
Slave narratives supported the abolitionist cause by revealing the horrors of slavery.
Such autobiographies as The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano (1789) were widely distributed and read.
Equiano’s powerful story helped influence the British government to stop the slave trade in 1807.
Ask Yourself
1. Name four types of early American narratives.
2. What are slave narratives, and how did they serve the abolitionist cause?
American Narrative Tradition
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Political Writing
Collection 3 Literary Focus
The Power of Reason
Political Writing
The American Revolution was fueled by influential political writings supporting independence.
The writers who inspired the colonists’ revolt based their arguments on the ideals of rationalism.
Political Writing
The rationalist movement marked the beginning of the Age of Reason in Europe in the seventeenth century.
Rationalist thinkers believe that humans
• can discover truth using reason• can use reason to understand
natural laws and guide their lives• need not rely only on religious
faith or intuition
Political Writing
The rationalists were not non-believers.
rationalists believed that God created the natural world and its laws.
rationalists thought the universe operated without divine intervention.
Like the Puritans…
Unlike the Puritans…
These beliefs—which were shared by many of America’s Founders—are known as deism.
Political Writing
The rationalist idea that all people are free to use reason to better their lives was part of the justification for independence.
It’s also the foundation of the most important political documents in American history and literature—
the Declaration of Independence
and the U.S. Constitution.
The Argument for Revolt
Political Writing
Early American leaders spread their ideas by publishing their words and distributing them to the Colonists.
Thomas Paine’s pamphlet Common Sense, published in 1776, is considered by many to be the most important written work justifying independence.
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Political Writing
Common Sense, only 47 pages long, sold 500,000 copies at a time when the population of the Colonies was a little over 2 million.
Paine applied both rationalist thought and deist principles to his arguments in favor of revolution.
Founding a New Nation
Political Writing
Some early American political writers—such as Paine—aroused passion for independence.
Other revolutionary leaders used words—spoken and written—to lay the foundation for the new nation.
Political Writing
In 1775, as the Virginia Convention was debating compromise with Britain, Patrick Henry delivered his famous speech:
“Give me liberty, or give me death!”
Like Paine, Henry used rationalism to persuade the delegates to arm the Colonists.
Henry’s speech was a key step on the road to independence, and his words became a battle cry.
The Granger Collection, New York
Political Writing
The next year, the Second Continental Congress appointed a committee—including Thomas Jefferson—to draft a declaration of independence.
As one of the main authors, Jefferson infused the document with rationalist ideals.
The authors took the ideas that inspired their revolt and used them as a basis for the new government.
Independence Hall, Philadelphia
Political Writing
The Declaration of Independence was the first American document to describe an ideal relationship between the people and their government.
Underlying this relationship, which emphasized the rights of individuals, was the rationalist belief in humans’ capacity—and freedom—to reason for themselves.
Political Writing
Influences on Early American Political Writing
Early American political writing was influenced by philosophy, beliefs, events, and even the spread of technology:
• ideas and principles from Europe’s Age of Reason, particularly the ideals of rationalism
• emergence of deism and its influence on America’s leaders and writers
• conflict between British rule and American colonists seeking independence
• spread of self-published political writing
Ask Yourself
1. In what ways did the philosophies of rationalism and deism contribute to American independence?
2. What role did pamphlets and political speeches play in the decision to declare independence from Britain?
3. How did political writing allow individuals to affect the development of an entire nation? How does this power of the individual reflect the principles upon which the United States was founded?
Political Writing
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The End