The New American Culture: Art, Literature, Transcendentalism Goal 2
American Culture A clear American culture begins to emerge in the 1830s. Art and literature began to reflect American themes and ideals rather than mirror European style and design.
Hudson River School The Hudson River School was a group of artists that focused on portraying the beauty of the American landscape. The paintings revealed the truth in human emotion.
Buffalo Bull's Back Fat, head chief, Blood Tribe in the National Museum of American Art, Washington D.C. By George Catlin Asher Durand Kindred Spirits, 1849 The New York Public Library, New York City
A Lake in the Sierra Nevada by Albert Bierstadt
Frederic Church Niagara 1857 Oil on canvas The Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington
Transcendentalism Transcendentalism was a philosophical group that was reflected in American literature. Emphasized: Simple living Celebrating nature Optimism Freedom Self-reliance
Ralph Waldo Emerson Emerson was a transcendentalist New England writer Wrote about simple living, nature, and personal emotion and imagination
Henry David Thoreau Lived in solitude at Walden Pond in Massachusetts, writing the book Walden Urged the concept of civil disobedience, protesting by refusing to obey the law (essay “Civil Disobedience). Gandhi & Martin Luther King adopt this view in their protests in the 20th century)
Other American Writers
James Fenimore Cooper Wrote about the American frontier & Native Americans The Last of the Mohicans Leatherstocking Tales
Edgar Allen Poe Helped create the mystery genre. “The Raven” Anti-transcendentalist Helped create the mystery genre. “The Raven” “Tell-Tale Heart”
Nathaniel Hawthorne Anti-transcendentalist Books dealt with the problems of human nature, sin, and punishment for sins (Puritan roots) The Scarlet Letter
Washington Irving “The Father of American Literature” Wrote about the American common man Legend of Sleepy Hollow Rip Van Winkle
James Fenimore Cooper Wrote about the American frontier & Native Americans The Last of the Mohicans Leatherstocking Tales