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Adaptive

Learn American Literature

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Session Length

~13 min

Adaptive Checks

12 questions

Transfer Probes

6

Lesson Notes

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.

You'll be able to:

  • Identify major movements in American literature from Puritanism through postmodernism and their cultural contexts
  • Analyze narrative techniques, symbolism, and thematic concerns in canonical American novels and poetry
  • Compare how American authors across eras have represented identity, democracy, and the national experience
  • Evaluate critical interpretations of American literary texts using historical, feminist, and postcolonial frameworks

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Key Concepts

Transcendentalism

A philosophical and literary movement of the 1830s-1860s centered in New England, emphasizing individualism, intuition, the divinity of nature, and self-reliance over established religion and political institutions. Led by Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau.

Example: Thoreau's 'Walden' (1854) chronicles his two-year experiment in simple living at Walden Pond, arguing that deliberate solitude in nature leads to spiritual truth and self-knowledge.

The American Renaissance

A period roughly from 1830 to 1865 during which American literature achieved a distinctive national voice and produced many of its most enduring masterworks. The term was popularized by critic F.O. Matthiessen in 1941.

Classic American literature collection

Example: Herman Melville's 'Moby-Dick' (1851), Walt Whitman's 'Leaves of Grass' (1855), and Nathaniel Hawthorne's 'The Scarlet Letter' (1850) all emerged from this era of creative ferment.

The Harlem Renaissance

A cultural, literary, and artistic movement centered in the Harlem neighborhood of New York City during the 1920s and 1930s. It celebrated Black identity, heritage, and artistic expression, and challenged racial stereotypes through literature, music, and art.

Writer's desk evoking the creative process

Example: Langston Hughes's poem 'The Negro Speaks of Rivers' (1921) connects African American identity to ancient civilizations, while Zora Neale Hurston's 'Their Eyes Were Watching God' (1937) explores Black female selfhood in the rural South.

The Lost Generation

A group of American writers who came of age during World War I and became disillusioned with traditional values, materialism, and the promises of the American Dream. The term is attributed to Gertrude Stein and was popularized by Ernest Hemingway.

Example: F. Scott Fitzgerald's 'The Great Gatsby' (1925) depicts the moral emptiness behind Jazz Age wealth, while Hemingway's 'The Sun Also Rises' (1926) portrays expatriates adrift in post-war Europe.

Southern Gothic

A literary subgenre that employs grotesque characters, decaying settings, and dark humor to explore social issues in the American South, including racial injustice, poverty, and the legacy of slavery. It draws on Gothic conventions but roots them in Southern culture.

Example: Flannery O'Connor's 'A Good Man Is Hard to Find' (1953) uses violence and dark irony to examine grace and morality, while William Faulkner's Yoknapatawpha County novels chronicle the decline of the Southern aristocracy.

The Beat Generation

A literary movement of the 1950s that rejected mainstream American values, celebrated spontaneity, spirituality, drug experimentation, and sexual liberation, and pioneered new forms of poetic and prose expression. Key figures include Jack Kerouac, Allen Ginsberg, and William S. Burroughs.

Example: Kerouac's 'On the Road' (1957) captured the restless, freewheeling spirit of the Beats through its breathless cross-country narrative, while Ginsberg's 'Howl' (1956) challenged censorship and literary convention.

Naturalism

A late-nineteenth and early-twentieth-century literary movement influenced by Darwinism and determinism, depicting characters as products of heredity and environment with little free will. Naturalist works often focus on the struggles of lower-class characters against indifferent social and natural forces.

Example: Stephen Crane's 'The Red Badge of Courage' (1895) strips war of its romance, while Theodore Dreiser's 'Sister Carrie' (1900) follows a young woman driven by economic forces beyond her control.

The Great American Novel

A concept describing a novel that captures the essence of the American experience in its totality -- its ideals, contradictions, diversity, and spirit. The term has been debated since the nineteenth century and various works have been proposed as candidates.

Example: Mark Twain's 'Adventures of Huckleberry Finn' (1884), Fitzgerald's 'The Great Gatsby,' Melville's 'Moby-Dick,' and Morrison's 'Beloved' (1987) are frequently cited as contenders for this designation.

More terms are available in the glossary.

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