ENGL 209(F) American Literature: Origins to 1865 (Same as American Studies 209)

American literature from "Origins to 1865," especially as taught in New England, once meant a single tradition, beginning with Puritan writers and culminating with Emerson and Whitman. We shall certainly pay close attention to this tradition: towards the start of the course, we will read such Puritan writers as the poets Anne Bradstreet and Edward Taylor, and the theologian Jonathan Edwards; towards the end, we will read the canonical authors of the American Renaissance (Poe, Emerson, Thoreau, Hawthorne, Melville, Whitman, Dickinson). But we will complicate the assumption of a single tradition by reading some pre-1620 works translated into English (e.g., Columbus, Native-American trickster tales), some writing from the South (e.g., Jefferson), and African-American writing (e.g., Harriet Jacobs, Frederick Douglass). Requirements: one 4- to 5-page paper, one 6- to 8-page paper, a final exam, and class participation. Prerequisite: a 100-level English course, except 150. Enrollment limited to 40. (Pre-1800/1700-1900)

Hour: LIMON