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THE REVO LUTIONARY PE RIOD 1750-1800 American Literature

THE REVOLUTIONARY PERIOD 1750-1800 American Literature

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Page 1: THE REVOLUTIONARY PERIOD 1750-1800 American Literature

THE

REVOLUTI

ONARY

PERIO

D

1750-1800

American Literature

Page 2: THE REVOLUTIONARY PERIOD 1750-1800 American Literature

Major Authors

Benjamin Franklin Thomas Jefferson Thomas Paine Patrick Henry

Page 3: THE REVOLUTIONARY PERIOD 1750-1800 American Literature

Types of Literature

AutobiographySpeechesPamphletsPoems

AlmanackDeclarationLetters public & private

Page 4: THE REVOLUTIONARY PERIOD 1750-1800 American Literature

The Age of Reason or Enlightenment

Writers valued reason over faith

This was a major change from the Puritan period and the belief in God for salvation

Belief in the power of science to further human development

Page 5: THE REVOLUTIONARY PERIOD 1750-1800 American Literature

What does it mean to revolt?

1. To attempt to overthrow the authority of the state; rebel

2. To oppose or refuse to accept something

Page 6: THE REVOLUTIONARY PERIOD 1750-1800 American Literature

Why do you think people revolt?

What are things in your life that you feel you should revolt against?

What are the consequences of revolt?

Page 7: THE REVOLUTIONARY PERIOD 1750-1800 American Literature

Literary Terms

Diction- style of speaking or writing determined by the choice of words by a speaker or a writer.Persuasion-the action or fact of persuading someone or of being persuaded to do or believe something.Charged words--any word that can evoke a strong or powerful emotional response from the reader/listener (tool used often in media to manipulate opinions)Rhetorical DevicesRepetition- a literary device that repeats the same words or phrases a few times to make an idea clearer.Restatement- restating an idea, sometimes in a new or different way. Parallelism- the use of components in a sentence that are grammatically the same; or similar in their construction, sound, meaning or meter.Rhetorical Question- asked just for effect or to lay emphasis on some point discussed when no real answer is expected.

Page 8: THE REVOLUTIONARY PERIOD 1750-1800 American Literature

PATRICK HENRY

1736-1799

Page 9: THE REVOLUTIONARY PERIOD 1750-1800 American Literature

Considered to be the most powerful orator (public speaker) of the American Revolution.

1775 he delivered his most famous speech at the Virginia Provincial Convention

HIS INFLUENCE ON THE CONVENTION

Page 10: THE REVOLUTIONARY PERIOD 1750-1800 American Literature

Henry played a key role in turning colonial sentiment against negotiation with England and toward armed resistance to England

He begins his speech with a respectful rebuttal to the previous speeches and then defends his call for independence.

HIS INFLUENCE ON THE CONVENTION

Page 11: THE REVOLUTIONARY PERIOD 1750-1800 American Literature

He argues that the colonists have exhausted every other option and war is all that is going to solve their problems.

He goes on to say that the British are already preparing for war which undercuts any argument for peaceful compliance.

Page 12: THE REVOLUTIONARY PERIOD 1750-1800 American Literature

The Virginia Conventions were a series of five political meetings in the Colony of Virginia during the American Revolution. Because the House of Burgesses had been dissolved in 1774 by Royal Governor Lord Dunmore, the conventions served as a revolutionary provisional government until the establishment of the independent Commonwealth of Virginia in 1776.

THE VIRGINIA CONVENTION

Page 13: THE REVOLUTIONARY PERIOD 1750-1800 American Literature

The first representative-based government group in the American Colonies.

The first time they were allowed to make legislative decisions without the King.

HOUSE OF BURGESSES?

Page 14: THE REVOLUTIONARY PERIOD 1750-1800 American Literature

Burgess: a representative from the group—usually rich landowners

Famous Delegates: Patrick Henry, George Washington, Thomas Jefferson

WHO ATTENDED THE CONVENTION

Page 15: THE REVOLUTIONARY PERIOD 1750-1800 American Literature

British “Intolerable Acts” had been instated

Organized by the Virginia House of Burgesses

Purpose: To decide what to do about Britain’s increasing pressures

WHAT WAS DISCUSSED

Page 16: THE REVOLUTIONARY PERIOD 1750-1800 American Literature

April 19, 1775 (one month from the day of Henry’s speech), the Revolutionary War began at the Battle of Lexington.

THE REVOLUTIONARY WAR

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Repetition

God WarSlaveryChainsFreedomLibertyReconciliation Struggle

Page 18: THE REVOLUTIONARY PERIOD 1750-1800 American Literature

THE DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE

Thomas Jefferson

Page 19: THE REVOLUTIONARY PERIOD 1750-1800 American Literature

Cries for a New Nation

Focus of politics and writing The Declaration of Independence – 1776

Thomas Jefferson The Declaration of Independence was drafted and sent to

King George III of England politely requesting independence from English rule. It asserted a philosophy of government that said that any government can only rule with the consent of the governed and that the basic purpose of government is to protect people's rights. It gave many examples of how the government of Great Britain had violated the rights of the colonists and so lost their consent. It then proclaimed that, as a result of this, the colonies were free and independent states. To be specific, there were two reasons for the Declaration: To declare to the world, that the British Colonies in America were

declaring themselves an independent nation. To explain (by listing the grievances against the King) why the colonies

were declaring independence.

Page 20: THE REVOLUTIONARY PERIOD 1750-1800 American Literature

Declaration of Declaration of IndependenceIndependence

Drafted by Thomas Jefferson

All government power comes from the people

King had trampled the peoples’ natural rights.

Colonists now had the right to rebel

Page 21: THE REVOLUTIONARY PERIOD 1750-1800 American Literature

LITERARY CHARACTERISTICS emphasis on logic and rational thought, not emotions;

emphasis on the social/good of the community, not the individual

“But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same object, evinces a design to reduce them under absolute despotism, it is their right, it is their duty to throw off such government, and to provide new guards for their future security.”

Page 22: THE REVOLUTIONARY PERIOD 1750-1800 American Literature

Literature of the American Revolution:

in an age of revolution, literature was of course greatly influenced by political texts

non-fiction texts