colonial era to the cold war. poetry m. wigglesworth- “day of doom” religious literature j....

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Colonial Era to the Cold War

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Colonial Era to the Cold War

Poetry M. Wigglesworth- “Day of Doom”

Religious Literature J. Winthrop- “City Upon a Hill” J. Edwards G. Whitefield

Captivity Narratives Revolutionary Literature

Thomas Paine- “Common Sense” Ben Franklin- “Poor Richard’s Almanac”

Political Enlightenment

Locke: Natural Rights Hobbes: Equality/ Leviathan Rousseau: Social Contract Jefferson: Right to Revolution

Religious Deism: God as Clockmaker 1st Great Awakening: Direct/ Emotive

Rural Population/ Farmers Fast Growing Population Ethnicities: English/ German/ Scots-Irish Indentured Servants/ Slaves Harsh Laws for the Poor Education

New England: Schools 9 Colleges

Political Federalist Papers

Federal Style Neoclassical

Roman Thought/ Style Thomas Jefferson

Monticello

Federalists Centralized Power/ Executive

Anti-Federalists Small Government/ Congress

Hamiltonians Industry/ Strong Gov’t/ Tariffs/ Cities

Jeffersonians Farming/ Strong States/ No Tariffs or Banks

Farmers Movement to Midwest Early Industrialization

Samuel Slater

Causes War of 1812 Male Suffrage

American/ Knickerbockers J. Fenimore Cooper: Nature Edgar Allen Poe: Pessimistic Washington Iriving: Dutch Nathaniel Hawthorne- “Scarlet Letter” Herman Melville

Transcendentalism Emerson Thoreau Walt Whitman: “Leaves of Grass”

2nd Great Awakening Mormons Class Splits in Churches

Reform Movements Individuals can reform evils Utopias

Mass Democracy Dorr Rebellion

State Sponsored Schools/ Universities Farmers/ Merchants/ Workers Abolitionism

Poetry Whitman Emily Dickinson: Death

Realism Mark Twain: South/ Midwest/ Vernacular H. Beecher Stowe: “Uncle Toms Cabin”

Abolitionism Frederick Douglass William Lloyd Garrison

North- Industry/ Small Farms South- Small Farms/ Plantations

Few Southerners owned slaves Free Blacks Immigrants

Irish: Religion/ Poor Germans: Language

Naturalism Stephen Crane- “Red Badge of Courage”/

“Maggie” Edith Wharton- “Age of Innocence” T. Dreiser- “Sister Carrie”

Muckrackers U. Sinclair- “Jungle” Edward Bellamy- “Looking Backward” Jacob Riis Ida Tarbell

Victorian Chicago School

Sullivan Frank Lloyd Wright

Beaux Arts

Home Insurance Building

Social Gospel Gospel of Wealth Social Darwinism Populism Anti-Foreignism

APA Chinese Exclusion Act

New Immigration South/East Europe Jane Addams: Hull House

Blue Collar Unions

Knights of Labor Urbanization End of the Frontier Sports Women’s Rights

Poetry Ezra Pound T.S. Elliot

Lost Generation F. Scott Fitzgerald Ernest Hemingway William Faulkner: South

Urban/ Blue Collar Conspicuous Consumption Anti-Foreignism: KKK/ Quota Acts Hollywood Jazz Flappers

John Steinbeck “Grapes of Wrath” “Of Mice and Men”

Public Works of Art Project WPA

Modernism Harper Lee: To Kill a Mockingbird J.D. Salinger Slyvia Plath: Bell Jar Ralph Ellison: Invisible Man

Beatniks Allen Ginsberg Jack Kerouac

Abstract Jackson Pollock

Pop Art Andy Warhol

Levittown

Movement to Suburbs Conformity Greasers: James Dean