Top Banner
The History of American Language and Literature Muhammad Andre Sahay 135 110 100 111 012
19
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: hell

The History of American

Language and Literature

Muhammad Andre Sahay135 110 100 111 012

Page 2: hell

The Mingling of Tongues

• American Literature is rich and diverse

• Difficult to generalizie about the pattern

• The departure from the old country to the new country ignite the series of diaries and letters

• The reading class of each national group soon had its own monthly, weekly, or daily paper

Page 3: hell

Cont.

• Early attempts at journalism is Clumsy and Crude

• Literary pattern changed after 1870

• The new immigrant writers began to critize their environment through their novel'

• Immigrant Act of 1924

Page 4: hell

The Reading Class of National Group

German American

Italian

Scandanavian

French

Jewish American

Page 5: hell

German American

• The Most Considerable body of non-English writing

• The line of the patterns are clearly and easily discernible

• Stream of travel literature began in the second and third decade of the 19th Century.

Page 6: hell

Cont

• Charles Sealsfield• Devote himself to

fiction• He has a high degree

of patriotism• Cloaked his trye

identity• Claimed to be

"America's Most Famous Author"

Page 7: hell

Cont.• Friedrich Arman

Strubberg• He was a Hunter,

Soldier, Rancher, Merchant, Physician and Enterpreneur

• Produced some hundreds and fifty books of travel and adventure after he across the America

Page 8: hell

Cont.

• After 1870, the use of german in speech and writing declined

• By 1900 the german theater had almost dissapeared

• Lyric Poetry grew weak thin.

Page 9: hell

French Literature

• French Literature blossom in Louisiana

• After 1829 the number of French Writers in Louisiana is large

• The ability to write Prose or verse was a necessary accomplishment for a creole gentlement

• From 1840, the most significant French works appeared

Page 10: hell

Cont.

• Charles Etienne Arthur Gayarre

• Educated in New Orleans and educated at law in Philadelphia

• has ambition to become Louisiana's Walter Scott

Page 11: hell

Italian Literature

• The Number of Italian immigrants was small

• The literary men of Italian use other language rather than Italian for their works

• After 1800 there was a huge number of Italian Immigrants

Page 12: hell

Scandanavian Literature

• The earliest writer were either journalists or ministers

• At the end of 19th century, professional literary class developed

• They were using English in their works

Page 13: hell

Jewish-American Literature

• One of the richest product of the mingling tongues

• In 1825, Jews immigrants were 16.000, a Century later that number were grow to more than 4.000.000

• The literature of Jews began with Hebrew writings of a religious nature

Page 14: hell

Cont.

• Yiddish writer found that in America they can develop their talent

- The early desire to cast the old world into a mythical melting pot has given place to convict the immigrant

Page 15: hell

American Language

• The Great movement to the west that fixed the American language

• American preserved the elizabethan era of boldness of speech

• At later stages American English recieved many loans from the languages of non-english Immigrants

Page 16: hell

Cont.

• American spelling and pronounciation have departed from English Standards

• The simplified spelling movement was launched by Francis A. March, W. D. Whitney, F.J. Child and other

Page 17: hell

Puritanism as A Literary Force

• Most of "Puritanism as a Literary Force" interprets American literature in relation to the new england puritans of old.

Page 18: hell

Colonial Literary Culture

• Benjamin Franklin once noted that the business of making a nation restricted literary activity in Colonial America. Franklin seemed to think that people needed a stable government and economy before they could make great advances in cultural pursuits such as literature, music, and painting.

Page 19: hell

Cont.

• Some central themes emerge from this literature. Because of the nature of their endeavor, for example, Captain John Smith and other chroniclers of settlement in the 17th century often addressed the subjects of will and work, the relationship between humans and nature, and the differences between European and Native American cultures.