Friday, December 27, 2019

City Upon a Hill Colonial American Literature

John Winthrop used the phrase City upon a Hill to describe the new settlement, with the eies of all people upon them. And with those words, he laid a foundation for a new world. These new settlers certainly represented a new destiny for this land. Religion and Colonial Writing Early Colonial writers spoke of transforming the landscape and its people. In his report from the Mayflower, William Bradford found the land, A hideous and desolate wilderness, full of wild beasts and wild men. Coming to this paradise of horrors, the settlers wanted to create for themselves a heaven on earth, a community in which they could worship and live as they sought fit - without interference. The Bible was cited as the authority for law and everyday practices. Anyone who disagreed with Biblical doctrine, or presented different ideas, was banned from the Colonies (examples include Roger Williams and Anne Hutchinson), or worse. With these high ideals ever in their minds, much of the writings of this period consisted of letters, journals, narratives, and histories - highly influenced as they were by British writers. Of course, many of the colonists spend a great deal of time in the simple pursuit of survival, so its no wonder that no great novels or other great literary works emerged from the hands of early Colonial writers. In addition to the time constraints, all imaginative writing was banned in the colonies until the Revolutionary War. With drama and novels looked upon as evil diversions, most of the works of the period are religious in nature. William Bradford wrote a history of Plymouth and John Winthrop wrote a history of New England, while William Byrd wrote about a border dispute between North Carolina and Virginia. Probably not surprising, sermons, along with philosophical and theological works, remained the most prolific form of writing. Cotton Mather published some 450 books and pamphlets, based on his sermons and religious beliefs; Jonathan Edwards is famous for his sermon, Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God. Poetry In the Colonial Period Of the poetry that emerged from the Colonial period,  Anne Bradstreet is one of the most well-known authors. Edward Taylor also wrote religious  poetry, but his work wasnt published until 1937.

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