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American Literature 1820–1865
- In part, women were denied formal education due to perceptions
of the moral hazards of reading Greco-Roman classics and
novels. See, for example, Fanny Fern’s “Male
Criticism of Ladies’ Books.” Even at the advent
of the twentieth century, women were ‘protected’
by men from potential moral degeneration, often at the expense
of basic freedoms—and even sanity. Charlotte Perkins
Gilman addresses this subject in her story “The Yellow
Wall-paper” and her essay “Why I Wrote The
Yellow Wall-paper” (pages 844–45 in volume
C).
- Frederick Douglass’s Narrative of the Life of
Frederick Douglass, an American Slave is a powerful
account of the humiliations of slavery and the resilience
of the human spirit. Like Douglass, Booker T. Washington
emerged as a national figure as the result of a short public
address of his personal experiences in Up From Slavery
(pages 746–80 in volume C).
- The condition of Jewish Americans and their relationship
to their faith at the time Emma Lazarus wrote “In
the Jewish Cemetery at Newport” comes in sharp contrast
with the portrayal of conflicted religious loyalties and
personal feelings in Philip Roth’s story “Defender
of the Faith” (pages 2278–99 in volume E).
- Bayard Taylor’s letters home from California, collected
in Eldorado, and Henry David Thoreau’s Walden,
about his travels in Connecticut, show evidence of a vastly
changed North American continent since the arrival of the
earliest European colonists. For some of the oldest extant
travel accounts, see Bartolomé de las Casas’s
The Very Brief Revelation of the Devastation of the
Indies and Samuel de Champlain’s The Voyages
of the Sieur de Champlain (pages 39–42 and 88–97,
respectively, in volume A).
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