From the story of John Smith, the author examined the first efforts of colonization by the English in Virgina. From Smith’s point of view, this land was very fruitful and befitted for human’s lives, but in fact, the first years in Virgina was dreadful. The harsh weather, the aggressive Indians, the hot and humid summer killed many settlers. Ten years after the first landing, only 400 settlers out of 2000 alived.…
Cahokia: an ancient Native American city (c. 600–1400 CE),The Mississippian culture was a mound-building Native American culture…
When reviewing the writings of John Smith and other various writers, we begin to envision the significant roles they played in the colonization of the New World. Despite the hardships John Smith faced while attempting to colonize Jamestown, he implemented strong values and principals such as “one who does not work, shall not eat.” In Smith’s eyes all people were to work together to achieve a common goal. He always thought about what was best for his people, and made sure to devise strategies that helped the entire group. When He and his people began to struggle due to the harshness of the land, Smith believed it best to befriend the Natives of the New World and learn from them.…
Within the novel All the Light We Cannot See the reader can see Werner’s changes as he begin to spend more time in the academy and at war. Werner begins to adopt a similar mindset as the German people; he puts his own beliefs aside for the safe of Germany. During a training exercise when a student is asked to pick out the weakest Werner willing joins the mob in chasing him down even though he knows it’s wrong. “Why they’re chasing this boy, and what they’re supposed to do if they catch him. Except in some atavistic part of his brain, he knows exactly what they’ll do” (Doerr, 169).…
9. What were the three general cultural/economic groups established in these early British colonies? Southern Colonies, Middle Colonies, New England…
In this book, Kupperman is telling a well-known event in remarkable detail. She intentionally uses last three chapters of the nine to tell the Jamestown’s history. The first six are in relation to how Jamestown came to be. The first chapter deals with political, national and religious conflicts during this period and how it motivated the English to venture West. The second is titled,” Adventurers, Opportunities, and Improvisation.” The highlight of this chapter is the story of John Smith, and how his precious experience enabled him to save ”the Jamestown colony from certain ruin.” (51) He is just an example of the “many whose first experiences along these lines were Africa or the eastern Mediterranean later turned their acquired skills to American ventures.” (43) Chapter three discusses the European and Native American interaction before and during this period. “North America’s people had had extensive and intimate experience of Europeans long before colonies was thought of, and through this experience they had come to understand much about the different kind of people across the sea.” (73) This exchange of information happened because a lot of Europeans lived among…
In John Smiths writing the Indians would not release him to fetch water nor supplies to help the natives. Most would interpret these denials as signs of savages with no code of honor. Which in retrospect to the time from a modern point of view would seem like pure disaster for the English to move more people over sea’s. However, this works in their favor since later we are introduced to Pocahontas, the chiefs thirteen-year-old daughter, who ends up marring John smith who is in his fifty’s and brings her back to England as a form of forming ties with the natives. Johns smiths work truly shows the struggle and differences between establishing Jamestown and getting along with the natives.…
The economy plays an important role in colonial America. The leaders on the New England colonies prided themselves on the idea that religion was the primary motivation for emigration, but economic motives were hardly unimportant. The American colonial economy was export-driven, although by far the largest share of output was consumed internally. Joint stock companies financed the initial conquest of New England and the Chesapeake colonies. Investors were expecting profits from the riches of the New World but would end up basically paying the colonists' bills. After several years of trial and error, the colonists discovered that agricultural goods such as corn, wheat, tobacco, rice, indigo, and naval stores were in great demand in England and Europe. By the mid-seventeenth century, trade under England's support was mutually beneficial. The English navy protected colonial commerce, and colonists gained a guaranteed market in England and access to English and Scottish credit and manufactured goods. The English gained markets for manufactured goods, profits from the sale of colonial staples on the Continent, and interest payments on the credit they extended.…
Log#9;4/1 For my revision strategies I plan on adding a little bit more details to my essay. I don't want to side with one person in my essay but look through everyones point of view and judge the readings fairly. In a compare and contrast essay its not appropriate to side with one person in the writing but with all the different people and that is something I must improve upon.…
Over the years the topic of human nature has been studied and debated by many. Human nature can be defined as distinct characteristics that include how people think and act naturally. Between past and present events, there is corruption in human nature. With the corruption of human nature people only do kind acts only out of self interest. Throughout history, early American authors, such as Jonathan Edwards, Thomas Jefferson, and Olaudah Equiano, convey how they view human nature through their literature. While Edwards and Equiano views human nature as purely evil and greedy. Meanwhile Jefferson also talks about the corruption of human nature, he includes how humans has the choice of changing their evil ways. Although these early writers are different people, they share similar views on human nature through use of rhetorical strategies such as…
Throughout American literature, many writers have used the subject of horror and violence within the many styles of writing during this time. The topics of Horror and Violence have been seen during slavery where it was expressed through story and autobiography about the brutal punishments of slave ship, kidnapping and beatings from the slave owners to slaves. We have also seen the use of Horror and Violence in more storytelling styles of writing where the writer writes about unrealistic topics to in a sense to scare or bring the feeling of fear to the reader. Horror and Violence has been see many times throughout the span of American Literature in writing such as The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano, The Devil and Tom Walker,…
"We hold these truths to be self-evident: that all men are created equal; that they are endowed by their creator with inherent and inalienable rights; that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness," says the Declaration of Independence. This phrase encompasses three major values shown throughout early American literature. The strong belief in religion, freedom, and a strong will for a better life. Each piece had one or more of these themes within them.…
The poem ends: “And yet it seems to be your own hand / Which turns the volume higher?” (34-35) The poet says even tho you may acknowledge this crisis you don't want to believe, see or hear it, one wants it to go away. So one turns up the volume so you don't have to face the price of this commercial world we live in and hear the cries for help in poverty. The exclusive wealthy control almost all of the money in America. There are extremely affluent and extremely impoverished in this country. When poverty tries to reach out for fairness, the wealthy refuse to hear any complaints and simply keep shouting louder and louder that this is the way it always has been and always will be.…
Many people go through life experiencing at one time or another "getting made fun of", however not many people would think of an author writing entire stories "making fun of" or using satire. Colonial authors explored different aspects of writing, but the theme that seems most present and persistent in the authors of the Chesapeake region is satire. Satire is a type or style of writing that was used in the seventeenth and eighteenth century, which criticizes and mocks its subject. Some good examples of authors that used this style of writing are Ebenezer Cook and William Byrd. To better understand satire I will define satire, tell how the authors use satire, and why they choose to use satire.…
Cindy Weinstein claims in Family, Kinship, and Sympathy in Nineteenth-Century American Literature, with respect to Louisa May Alcott’s Little Women, that this piece of sentimental literature has a “profound awareness of the relative fragility of the biological family and a commitment to strengthening and redefining it according to the logic of love”(Weinstein 4). Through Weinstein’s claim, she states that biological, familial ties are not what define a family; it is, however, through the love that the family shares with one another which makes them a true family. In agreement with this claim, Alcott’s novel Little Women shows that despite the biological, familial ties that the March family shares with each other. It is their strong bonds of love with one another and commitment to each other that allow them to…