-
1 American Literature - Learning Sources
-
1.1 American Passage: A Literary Survey
-
1.2 American Literature- NYU
-
1.3 TTC Classics of American Literature
-
1.4 American Novel Since 1945-Yale
-
1.5 Heath Anthology of American Literature
-
1.6 PAL:Perspectives in American Literature
-
1.7 TGC Literature&Life
-
1.8 Introduction to Literature and Life- Yale
-
1.9 Music Videos
-
2 Native American Literature
-
2.1 Overview
-
2.2 Oral Tradition-Navajo Songs
-
2.3 Native American Renaissance
-
2.4 Native Voices -Timeline
-
2.5 References
-
3 Puritan Literature(1620-1763)
-
3.1 Overview
-
3.2 Puritanism in American Life
-
3.3 Anne Bradstreet (1612-1672)
-
3.4 Jonathan Edwards (1703-1758)
-
4 Enlightenment Literature (1764-1815)
-
4.1 Overview
-
4.2 Benjamin Franklin(1706-1790)
-
4.3 Thomas Paine (1737-1809)
-
4.4 Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826)
-
4.5 Alexander Hamilton (1757-1804)
-
5 American Romanticism (1815-1865)
-
5.1 Overview
-
5.2 American Romanticism vs. British Romanticism
-
5.3 Washington Irving(1783-1859)
-
5.4 James Fenimore Cooper
-
5.5 Edgar Allan Poe (1809-1849)
-
5.6 Emerson, Thoreau and Transcendentalism
-
5.6.1 American Transcendentalism
-
5.6.2 Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803-1882)
-
5.6.3 Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862)
-
5.7 Nathaniel Hawthorne (1804-1864)
-
5.8 Herman Melville
-
5.9 Walt Whitman and Emily Dickinson
-
5.9.1 Free Verse
-
5.9.2 Song of Myself by Whitman
-
5.9.3 Oh Me Oh Life- Whitman in Dead Poets' Society
-
5.9.4 I Dwell in Possibility - Dickinson
-
5.9.5 “I Died for Beauty - but was scare” - Dickinson
-
5.10 References
-
6 American Realism (1865-1914)
-
7 American Modernism(1915-1945)
-
7.1 The Imagist Movement
-
7.2 The Lost Generation Writers
-
7.3 William Faulkner (1897-1962)
-
7.4 Trifles (1916) by Susan Glaspell
-
7.5 Eugene O’Neill
-
7.6 Tennessee Williams
-
7.7 Arthur Miller
-
8 American Postmodernism (1945-)
-
8.1 Ovewview
-
8.2 The Beat Generation
-
8.3 Black Humor - Joseph Heller
-
8.4 African American Literature
-
8.5 Chinese American Literature
-
8.6 References