The Literature of the Revolution The American Testament.

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Presentation transcript:

The Literature of the Revolution The American Testament

What is America? Every nation has its saga of its origin → The settlers of Jamestown and Plymouth; the War of Independence; The Civil War; The Frontier They constitute a kind of sacred history → America as a miracle The sacred history of its origin is underwritten by equally sacred texts

Like no other nation, America is founded on texts: A) The Bible: The Puritan saga that identifies the settlers with the Chosen People of the Old Testament B) The American Testament: i) The Declaration of Independence ii) The Constitution iii) The Gettysburg Address

The sagas or myths of America have all been challenged by counter-narratives: Settlement and Frontier →Extermination of the Indian American Independence →Slavery Civil War → Segregation of blacks and whites But the underlying myths survive → Luther King: “I Have a Dream”

The Declaration of Independence I) The origin of American Independence a) Political thought of the Enlightenment b) American experience in local self- government

The political thought of the Enlightenment The English Enlightenment → John Locke: A government must protect life, liberty and property; if the government fails to do this, the citizens are entitled to rebel The French Enlightenment (Montesquieu)

American experience in local self- government In all local matters, the 13 colonies had effectively governed themselves since the beginning, with little interference from England Not a genuine democracy (the vote depended on wealth and social standing)

II) Steps to Independence a)13 colonies, differing geographically, historically, religiously, economically and culturally b)Seven Years War ( ) → France and Spain are weakened → The Catholic threat is removed c)Question of Taxation → The army is needed against Indian rebellions and Britain wants America to pay for its own security

No Taxation without representation 1773: Boston Tea party 1774: First Continental Congress → First step towards a union of the 13 colonies (or states) 1775: Continental Congressmen are declared traitors by the British Crown. Lexington: first armed clash between Patriots and the British. The Continental Army is formed, and George Washington is made general

1776, January: Thomas Paine publishes “Common Sense” ( copies). The pamphlet provided popular arguments for independence 4 th July: Thomas Jefferson drafts The Declaration of Independence, signed by the Continental Congress

The Declaration of Independence (1776) We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.

With its statement of equality it constitutes a manifesto for democracy Lincoln regarded the Declaration of Independence as a pledge for the future, rather than something capable of being realized in 1776 American history may be read as a sequence of steps leading towards the fulfillment of the principles stated in the Declaration of Independence

Right from the beginning, America was better placed to achieve true democracy than any European country of its time The USA is the first nation without any feudal heritage It is the first testing ground for the political ideas of the Enlightenment

The Revolutionary War ends in The 13 states unite in a loose confederation Under the Articles of Confederation, every state is sovereign A common cause had united them during the war of independence. Would they remain united in the future, and in what form?

In 1787, representatives of the 13 states met in Philadelphia to find a way to a “more perfect union” The men who are known as The Founding Fathers came up with a unique document: The Constitution of the United States of American With the Constitution the united states of America became the United States of America

The USA becomes the 1st federally organized state in the world with the first modern constitution It was a practical solution arising from the particular need of the American states at that moment in history The federal model has since been copied by many other states The Constitution has become the blue-print for all other constitutions in the world

The American Constitution The Constitution establishes the separation of powers and invests the three branches of government with the authority they need to fulfill their missions America had the great fortune of having some of the most brilliant minds of its time who were involved in public life

The Constitution was not perfect→ A Bill of Rights was added in the form of 10 Amendments, in which the individual’s rights were established In more than 200 years only 16 further amendments have been added to the Bill of Rights: Abolishing slavery; giving the vote to blacks and later to women; and limiting the Presidency to two terms

The American Constitution has proved incredibly stable in a country that has grown from 4 million inhabitants in 1783 to over 300 millions – and from 13 to 50 states Together with the Bible, it is considered a “sacred” text, the centre-piece of the American Testament

The Civil War The 3rd saga of America Slavery stood in glaring contradiction with the principles of the Declaration of Independence Many northern states (Massachusetts, Pennsylvania…) had abolished slavery after Independence A number of plantation owners (Washington) freed their slaves in their will

Problems with abolishing slavery: After independence in 1783, saving the Union seemed more important than the question of slavery Economic question: who would compensate the slave owners?

In the middle of the 19th century the northern states put mounting pressure on the South to abolish slavery The answer of the southern states in 1862 was to break with the Union and form a Confederacy The greatest battle of the war was fought in 1863 in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania ( dead)

The Gettysburg Address Delivered by President Lincoln on the battlefield of Gettysburg, at the dedication of the Soldiers' National Cemetery It has become one of the greatest political speeches of all times, completing the American Testament

It reiterates the principles of The Declaration of Independence Four score and seven years ago our fathers brought forth, upon this continent, a new nation, conceived in liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal. Now we are engaged in a great civil war, testing whether that nation, or any nation so conceived, and so dedicated, can long endure. Principle of democratic government Government of the people by the people for the people, shall not perish from the earth.

After the war, the southern states are forced to give up slavery, but they maintain segregation of blacks and whites and prevents blacks from voting The Civil Rights Movement in the 1960s seeks to fulfill the aspirations of the Declaration of Independence On the first centenary of the Gettysburg Address, Martin Luther King delivers one of the most emblematic speeches of the 20 th century on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial: “I Have a Dream”

One of the most striking facts about America is the faith Americans have acquired in their own foundational texts America is understood as an ideal, a promise, a project embodied in its three “sacred” political texts

The American Testament

Bibliography Jerome Mortimer, We Hold These Truths: Understanding the Ideals and the Ideas of the Constitution, Macmillan, 1987 Max Maclean, We Hold These Truths to be Self-Evident: Four Masterpieces That Define Our Nation, Xulon, 2007