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    Hollitz Great Awakening

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    Out With the Old‚ In With the New There were multiple factors that influenced the Great Awakening in the early seventeen hundreds. From 1730 to 1740‚ rebellion spread throughout the colonies causing a major religious warfare between churches. In Contending Voice‚ Hollitz shows us the perspective of two famous preachers that gave the Great Awakening a stir of madness. The “wild‚” “indecent‚” and work of “mad men” revolutionized the way colonist viewed how religion could be so intense frequently

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    The Awakening Feminism has consistently been a major theme of literature throughout history. It has been used as a commentary on the status of women in a given time period‚ or to show how people’s attitudes have changed over time. Feminism in literature can also be used‚ as in the case of The Awakening by Kate Chopin‚ as a way to show how individual people‚ especially women can have a positive effect on the world around them. The actions of Edna and Adele Ratignolle in The Awakening are examples

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    Léonce as the prime Trigger in the Case of Edna Pontellier´s Personal Awakening In “The Awakening”‚ written by Kate Chopin‚ Edna Pontellier is the main character‚ who undergoes an awakening from a dependent woman living to the standards of the society to an independent self-aware individual. Through the regular absence of her husband Léonce Pontellier‚ Edna cannot speak with him about her thoughts‚ fears and important scenes in her life. Therefore she remotes herself mentally

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    2ND GREAT AWAKENING

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    2nd Great Awakening: 1820-1859 People: Rev. Charles Grandison Finney (1792-1875)‚ whose career took off after his dynamic evangelical revivals in the late 1820s in New York’s upstate "Burned-Over District." Finney’s brand of Christianity demanded perfection but allowed for repentant sinners to return to the fold. Barton W. Stone - an important preacher during the Second Great Awakening of the early 19th century. He was first ordained a Presbyterian minister‚ then was expelled from the church after

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    In Kate Chopin’s The Awakening‚ Edna Pontellier is a character who is alienated from the rest of society. She carries views which do not coincide with the norm‚ and in a way establishes her own idea of how women should live and be treated. Not only do her views estrange her from society‚ but she also physically separates herself from the life she used to live and the Victorian culture into which she was born. During this time‚ it was expected of a woman to be the perfect picture of a wife and mother

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    The Awakening: Adele Ratignolle An oppressive‚ patriarchal society‚ by its very nature‚ makes it difficult for women to express themselves and take charge of what they want to do with their lives. In The Awakening‚ a novella by Kate Chopin‚ Edna Pontellier realizes she can no longer cope with this subjugated type of lifestyle and metaphorically awakens to the notion that she can transform herself from powerless to independent. Madame Adele Ratignolle‚ a motherly figure who embodies many of the traditional

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    events was the first Great awakening. Many different preachers aided in spreading the Great Awakening throughout the colonies. Jonathan Edwards did his part to help carry on the North Hampton Revival started by his grandfather‚ Solomon Stoddard in North Hampton Church (1733-1735). Englishman‚ George Whitefield (1740-1770) was the best-known and most widely traveled evangelist of the time and received much publicity in the newspapers of that day. Another voice in the Awakening was that of Presbyterian

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    Second Great Awakening

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    The Second Great Awakening was a revival movement that had occurred in the 1730s with the goal of creating a Protestant creed that would maintain the idea of Christian community in a period of rapid individualism and competition. As our book mentions‚ the Second Great Awakening was “one of the most momentous episodes in the history of American religious. This tidal wave of spiritual fervor left in its wake countless converted souls‚ many shattered and reorganized church‚ and numerous new sects. It

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    By the mid-18th century‚ the colonies were seeing the emergence of the Great Awakening. This was an immense religious revival that swept across the Protestant world in the 1730s and 1740s. During this time‚ England‚ Scotland‚ Ulster‚ New England‚ the mid-Atlantic colonies‚ and for some time South Carolina‚ responded very well to calls for spiritual rebirth. This so called Great Awakening‚ broke many denominational loyalties in the colonies and allowed the Methodists and the Baptist to rush ahead

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    Second Great Awakening

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    12/16/13 The Second Great Awakening The Second Great Awakening was a religious and social reform movement from 1820-1860. Inspired by religious optimism‚ economic progress and democratic spirit people thought they could better their personal lives and society as a whole. Many religious‚ women’s rights and antislavery movements occurred as a result of the Second Great Awakening. Religious reform during the Great Awakening was very important and sparked a lot of other movements. The new reformers

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