American literature encompasses the body of written works produced in the United States and its preceding colonies, spanning from the early writings of Native American oral traditions and Puritan settlers to contemporary fiction, poetry, and drama. It reflects the nation's evolving identity, its struggles with democracy, individualism, race, class, and the meaning of the American experience.
The canon of American literature traces a rich arc from the colonial sermons of Jonathan Edwards and the revolutionary pamphlets of Thomas Paine, through the American Renaissance of Emerson, Thoreau, Whitman, Melville, and Hawthorne, into the Realist and Naturalist movements of Mark Twain, Henry James, and Stephen Crane. The twentieth century saw explosive innovation with the Harlem Renaissance, the Lost Generation, Southern Gothic, the Beat Generation, and postmodern experimentation by writers such as Toni Morrison, Thomas Pynchon, and Don DeLillo.
Studying American literature provides insight into the cultural, political, and philosophical currents that have shaped the United States. Themes of the frontier, self-reliance, racial justice, immigration, and the tension between idealism and disillusionment recur across centuries, making this literary tradition one of the most dynamic and diverse in the world. Critical approaches such as New Historicism, feminist criticism, and postcolonial theory have broadened the canon to include previously marginalized voices, from Native American and Latinx writers to Asian American and LGBTQ+ authors. Careers grounded in American literary study range from teaching and publishing to cultural criticism, archival research, and arts administration.