Preview

Enlightenment

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
5040 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Enlightenment
UNIT 5 FROM THE COLONIAL TO THE FEDERAL: THE CONTEXTS OF THE AMERICAN ENLIGHTENMENT

Objectives Introduction: The material basis of the American Enlightenment The Enlightenment in America. Slavery and the Enlightenment. The American Woman of the Eighteenth Century Let Us Sum Up Questions Suggested Readings

5.0

OBJECTIVES

The aim of this Unit is to take stock of the contexts of American literature produced between the period of the early European colonial settlements in America and the formation of a federal association of these colonies in the wake of their struggle to achieve independence from the domination of the government in England. This period is often referred to as the period of the American Enlightenment, taking off from the Enlightenment in England in terms of its ideas and ideals. Some of these ideas and ideals, as well as their exponents are presented in the Unit. The Unit intends to offset the 'optimism' of the Enlightenment ideology in general by focussing upon certain 'darker' aspects of the Enlightenment period.

5.1

INTRODUCTION: THE MATERIAL BASIS OF THE AMERICAN ENLIGHTENMENT

By the early 1700s two distinct economic worlds had taken shape in the colonies, generally north and south of Pennsylvania's southern border. One exported two crops, rice and tobacco, to Europe, and was in the process of constructing all its ways of living and thinking around a unique institution: chattel slavery. The other consisted overwhelmingly of, not the big planters such as those who owned the tobacco and rice plantations but, of small farmers free of feudal obligations to anyone superior to them. These two societies were unlike anything in the British Isles or in Europe as a whole. The distinction between the southern and the northern colonies gradually began to be erased with the expansion of agricultural activities in the north to the extent that the colonies there started exporting their produce, contrary to their earlier practice, to the

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    06.03 Battle after Battle, the Civil War Rages On Ch. 11, Sec. 3 & 4…

    • 586 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    The colonies of Massachusetts and Virginia were located in separate regions of the New World and had many social and economic variations. The very laws and ideas these people have put into work are what have shaped America into the county it is today. When looking at these two colonies we know one thing is for sure, trade, land, religion, and natural resources were vital parts of their being. In this free-response essay I will contrast the colonies by how their societies were ran and how their economies affected their way of life.…

    • 838 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Economic wise, the colonies had more differences than similarities. The North had small farms while the south had larger plantations. The northern colonies developed important trades on furs, timber, and other natural resources. The northern colonies developed into shipping center at New York, which originally belonging to the Dutch until 1664, where goods were stored. The English develop the harbors around New York and it became a major shipping center of the colonies. Meanwhile, the south developed important trades on agriculture, cotton, rice, and tea. At the time, the south had fewer raw materials than the North and mostly traded cotton. The cotton crop was the most important trade to the Southern colonies, it was nicknamed King Cotton. The reason of the South’s plantation out-sizing the North’s plantation was because the social aspect of each side. The Northern colony life mainly revolved the church members, when the south had more focus on the wealthy land owner. However, The North and south economics were similar to each other as well; for example, Tobacco and slavery. The North and South both also supported the use of indentured servants, people who came to America and was placed under contract to work for land owners for over a period of time, usually about seven year.…

    • 1158 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    In Virginia, there is a heavier focus on trade. Richard Frethorne’s letter to his father and mother describes his experience working and observing trade in Jamestown. Finally, in South Carolina, the agriculture is large scale and is made possible with slave labor. The “Iron Mask, Collar, Leg Shackles and Spurs Used to Restrict Slaves” image implies how invested southern plantation owners were in slavery by showing what they are willing to do to keep slaves in line. Minor’s diary, Frethorne’s letter, and the slavery image characterize the various cultures of the colonies.…

    • 92 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    The 1600’s was a period of time where the American colonies began to form solid sovereign states. In an effort to find profitable resources that can be used to send back to Europe, one Virginia colonist John Rolfe started experimenting with tobacco in 1612 seeing how well it fared in the Southern soil which inevitably yielded favorable results. Upon this discovery, the tobacco industry led its engines at full steam ahead. In 1615, an estimated 2,000 pounds was exported which grew over the next 14 years to 1.5 million pounds (Lawson, 44). This rapid increase was a result of poor immigrants coming from Europe under the conditions of indentured servitude which allowed them to work off their passage to the New World. As the market increased the demand for more crops by raising the prices on tobacco, plantation owners were always looking for ways to expand their farm land and increase the amount of labor in order to keep up the demand to ensure a more profitable situation.…

    • 655 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the book The Radicalism of the American Revolution, Gordon S. Wood analyzes Colonial America on the eve of the American Revolution. By describing the social hierarchy and patriarchal dependence in the colonies, he depicts the colonies as a pre-modern society.…

    • 700 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    In the midst of the Enlightenment Age, a time when philosophers such as Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Thomas Hobbes, and John Locke were forming new ideas of society and government, a war had started between Britain and its American colonies. The colonists claimed their government was failing to provide for its citizens, sharing Locke’s views of the natural rights of men that a government was meant to…

    • 66 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Once the population started booming because of this, more people decided to sell their food in exchange for some sort of labor. When people moved over to the new world, they discovered that farming could make you a lot of money. The climate in the south was more desirable for Farming. At first, the Chesapeake people were not interested in Planting at all all they were interested in was finding gold, and they were starving because of it. They truly believed that the Native Americans would give them the food they needed while they searched for food. Oh, how they were wrong. A man named John Smith controlled them and told them to farm to survive. John Rolfe was the man who discovered Tobacco and knew how to export it. Soon everyone started to get rich off of this tobacco trade. The problem was it is a very labor intensive crop and called for a lot of work on the farm. This lead to the uprising of indentured servitude and more importantly slave trade in the English colonies. Farming had a great influence on the southern colonies but not so much for the New England colonies. Since they had very dry air and infertile soil, The new England didn’t do much farming besides the stuff that they needed to survive. Instead of Farming, they brought in a lot of seafood for England. New England and the Chesapeake both farmed but the chesapeake made a living off of…

    • 1012 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    As American colonies started to attract more people, colonies population grew strategically. England’s mercantilist policy introduced to Americas a lot of goods, that were now available to different types of social classes. Previously luxury goods: coffee, tea and cotton clothing were now available to the middle class. Before the consumer revolution colonies were mainly agricultural, as trade expanded, colonial sites started to appear. The exchange of manufactured goods between them colonies drew them together and turned them to be more alike as England.…

    • 1516 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The Enlightenment’s Idea’s Influence on America The ideas from the Enlightenment included the philosophies of Voltaire, Baron de Montesquieu John Locke, Thomas Hobbes and Jean-Jacques Rousseau. These ideas included inalienable rights such as freedom, life, privacy, etc. There is a social “contract.” In return of the government protecting the people’s rights, the people would let the government rule.…

    • 265 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    When coming to the New World, colonists expected a better life than they had in New England, with opportunities of change. However, New England’s government had been oppressing those in America in multiple aspects, regardless of the large Atlantic separating the two. Because of Britain’s tyrannical way of addressing their power among the colonies, and the instilled fear by the British, a revolutionary era broke out. Enlightenment ideals and experiences throughout the revolutionary war, eventually molded the weak theories and principals exemplified in the Articles of Confederation.…

    • 798 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Early Us History

    • 1651 Words
    • 7 Pages

    Each colonial region developed its own peculiar economy. Staple export economies, using indentured or slave labor, developed in the southern colonies. Although a majority of free and indentured white colonial migrants came from towns where they had been artisans and wage laborers, the colonies were overwhelmingly agricultural. Farm operators relied heavily upon their families for labor. While fathers and older sons cleared land and planted, cultivated, and harvested grain or other staples, mothers and older daughters operated the dairy and vegetable gardens. The greater the level of staple production, the higher the likelihood that farm operators had access to labor beyond the family.…

    • 1651 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    At first the colonist thought the Chesapeake colonies would bring them fortune in means of precious metals, but this was a false hope because there was none to be found (131). In 1616, John Rolfe introduced tobacco to the planters, which sparked the shaping of the Chesapeake colonies (134). Tobacco was high in demand across Europe. It’s import surged from 200,000 pound in 1624 to 3,000,000 in 1638 and the Chesapeake became its largest exporter surpassing the West Indies. With the increase in product also came with the increase in needs of labor. Many colonist came to Chesapeake as indentured servants to work the…

    • 1003 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Enlightenment period played an important part in deciding practically every part of building Colonial America, mostly because it change the way people considered legislative issues, governmental issues, and religion. Without the principle thoughts and figures of the Enlightenment, the United States would have been radically different. The ideas that came within this period molded the ideals of the United States in its developmental years. The Enlightenment emphasized normal rights and legitimate governments laid on the consent and approval of the governed. Ideas like the freedom from oppression, natural rights, and better approaches for contemplating legislative structure came straight from Enlightenment philosophers. Colonists were tired…

    • 264 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    By the end of the seventeenth century, trade was the underpinning of the empire and the primary source of competition between European realms. The North American colonies were connected to Atlantic business by laws and trade. To exemplify, as the American settlements were drawn ever more entirely into the system of Atlantic market, they shared in the era’s consumer upheaval. In harbor cities and small inland villages, stores flourished and American media was covered in advertisements for British commodities. British vendors provided American traders with loans to allow them to import these goods, and roaming peddlers carted them into distant frontier territories. England traveled to seize power over Atlantic industry, solidify its grip on North…

    • 177 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays