Emerson, Thorough: man is one with nature/universe; if we're true to ourselves everything will be wonderful
Hawthorne, Melville: Reflect Calvinist thread in American lit-man is horrifying, darkness in souls
These 2 lines of thinking create American thought
Transcendentalism: Starts in Unitarian church (Emerson); all this stuff about the Eucharist, baptism, trinity,....the church has it wrong; he believed Christianity was a set of rules that puts inspirational side of Jesus in a box; Emerson left the church-Jesus understood the greatness in himself and in you (he was one with the force and you can be too).
-Over-soul (called this by Emerson): an ancient idea, in Hinduism (Atman, Brahman)-there's one universal life force; all of us are connected in universal human spirit (Atman-part of nature), so all of life is interconnected. So if you want to know yourself, go out in nature.
-expansive and contractive tendencies: we want to reach out to the over-soul, but also want to stick with things we know and understand; Emerson says we need to find a balance between these two tendencies; spend time in contemplation and in contact with oversoul; we find good by being one with the oversoul; man is basically good
-emphasis on intuition: we achieve connection with oversoul through imagination, intuitive thought
-nature as symbol or living mystery: we need to live the natural life to get in touch with oversoul
-the inner light (Quakers say we all have this light-all have a little bit of God inside of us and need to cultivate that)
-fundamental problem: what if we like torturing puppies? There's no grounds for saying this is wrong.
19th century: :heyday of American utopian colonies; idealist time; represent transcendentalist thought-we're going to have perfect society, dedicated to transcendentalist goals. Ex: Brook Farm (1841-57): personal affinity determines job assignments (do whatever inspires you; if you love plowing, go plow; but nobody wants to do the hard work); opposed to profit-exploitative-but what about if the crops fail-there's nothing set aside to help; it failed
Emerson: Heart and mouthpiece of Transcendentalists
American Scholar, Emerson, 1837:
Self-Reliance, Emerson, 1841: Reflects Emerson's deep mistrust of institutions, society. He promotes radical independence-this is what self-reliance means, not just puritan work ethic, it's not just growing your own carrots; it's being true to yourself spiritually and physically and understanding the spark of divinity inside you; be original; society to him means a set of rules-they are against our original thought; follow your whim.
Thoreau: interested in freedom (however you get it), not solitude; to live deliberately; do we really need land? to live to glorify God? These are just accepted ideas, very un-Emersonian. He works out ideas of Emerson laid out in Self Reliance. What is true, essential for us? Don't be someone's slave. But a simple life is a wise life. Luxuries life are a hinderance. Get rid of expectations of keeping with with neighbors. Life with rhythm of nature.
Puritans: For Bradford and Winthrop, nature is something to be feared. To build a city on the hill, we need to live in community following the law of mercy. Th & Em: to get to good life, we need to be out in wildness of nature--that's where freedom, truth and peace is found. Nature is probably the domain of the prince of darkness.
Hawthorne/Poe: Speculative Fiction (sci fi (Birthmark), fantasy)
Young Goodman Brown: Woods are wild/scary, the devil is there: here, take my snake; He's going into woods to prove he can stand up to devil; he's bringing his own understanding derived from Calvinist heritage; he's not necessarily saying anything for or against Calvinism; narration is ambiguous (don't really know for sure what's real, what's happening); he's highlighting the depravity of everyone's souls; as holy as we seem, we're all sinners; or: to someone consumed by sin, everything looks evil, like Goodman Brown; two interpretations are possible. A story about doubt and sin. Unlike Emerson who believes in communing with glory of nature. Hawthorne says we're NOT basically good. Same ideas in Ethan Brown and Birthmark. Ethan Brown finds unforgivable sin is his heart, which proves his lack of election. The sin is himself. He's not one of the elected. Birthmark: Georgiana's perfect except for birthmark. Represents a flew which they try to remove, but it's her one connection to the world/people; that makes her like others, so when they try to remove it, she dies. He's trying to create life. So Elmer thinks if he's in touch with nature, he can find life. Black Veil: covers secret sin, and we all have this; it separates us from each other; what makes us human is our brokenness. But we pretend that we're not broken.
Poe: Started detective novel genre; pioneer of realism
Realism: characters not seeing reality for what it is, living for an ideal (Editha, The Beast in the Jungle-he's waiting for something big to happen rather than loving what's right before him). In realism, there's less symbolism (i.e. Moby Dick) , but motifs (runs through the text/images After civil war, people have lost much of their idealism/cynical.
Regionalism: Industrial Revolution/mass migration (people moving around for better economics opportunities cuz life changing/modernizing, esp. the south), life is changing, more uniformity. Regionalists attempt to capture and document certain places/times.
Naturalism: no elements of the supernatural; it's pessimistic, materialistic (only thing that counts is the material world), determinism; man is just an animal that we can study in his surroundings like we study other animals; we are creatures shaped by nature