Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

CREATING AMERICAN CULTURE Cultural Nationalism –Literature / Art –Values / Virtues Religious Reforms Women’s Reforms Slavery & Abolition Economics & Immigration.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "CREATING AMERICAN CULTURE Cultural Nationalism –Literature / Art –Values / Virtues Religious Reforms Women’s Reforms Slavery & Abolition Economics & Immigration."— Presentation transcript:

1 CREATING AMERICAN CULTURE Cultural Nationalism –Literature / Art –Values / Virtues Religious Reforms Women’s Reforms Slavery & Abolition Economics & Immigration

2

3 American Virtues / Values (Republican Virtues) Self-Reliance Hard Work / Sacrifice Frugality (don’t waste…save) Moral Values –Honor –Integrity –Humility

4 Romance Era Writers (American Literature - themes) *nature of man, *struggles of evil, morality Washington Irving –Rip Van Winkle / The Legend of Sleepy Hollow Nathaniel Hawthorne –The Scarlet Letter Herman Melville –Moby Dick Edgar Allen Poe –“father of modern short story”

5 Patriotic Art

6 Greek & Roman CLASSICAL ARCHITECTURE

7 The GREAT AMERICAN WILDERNESS

8

9

10

11  A myth of the West as a land of romance, opportunity and adventure emerged.  Manifest Destiny  ".... the right of our manifest destiny to over spread and to possess the whole of the continent which Providence has given us for the development of the great experiment of liberty and … self-government entrusted to us. It is right such as that … for the full expansion of its principle and destiny of growth."

12 Religious – Spiritual Movements Lead to Social Movements (Transcendentalism) Ralph Waldo Emerson Henry David Thoreau (2 nd Great Awakening) Charles Finney

13 In France, I had almost always seen the spirit of religion and the spirit of freedom pursuing courses diametrically opposed to each other; but in America, I found that they were intimately united, and that they reigned in common over the same country… Religion was the foremost of the political institutions of the United States. -- Alexis de Tocqueville, 1832 The Rise of Popular Religion R1-1

14 Second Great Awakening (Religion) Kentucky & Tennessee Evangelical – Protestant – Revivalists Movement (Religious Change from Within) ( Activist Expression of Faith / Conversion ) –New Churches and Denominations( Baptist, Church of Christ, etc..) New Congregational Churches (Congregation LEADS the Church) Express “New Birth in Christ” with your actions and Good Deeds –Transform your life & Society –HUGE Impact on Society (explosion of Social Change) African Americans Christians –Southern Worship / Teaching Bible Huge impact on Slaves in South / Anti-Slavery Sentiments –A.M.E. Church (North)

15 Revivals Spread

16 The Second Great Awakening “Spiritual Reform From Within” [Religious Revivalism] Social Reforms & Moral Ideals of Liberty & Equality Temperance Asylum & Penal Reform Education Women’s Rights Abolitionism

17 Spiritual Religious (NO moral authority) (Moral Authority) Transcendentalists (spiritualism) worship of Nature – the Individual “Transcend” the limits of intellect and allow the emotions, the SOUL, to create an original relationship with the Universe”. (Belief in:) –Self-Directed Faith –Self-Created GOD They rejected all Secular Authority, the Law, the authority of Organized churches, the Scriptures, Conventional Values or Ideas of Morality

18 TranscendentalistsTranscendentalists (spiritualism) –Ralph Waldo Emerson – personal emotions (your feelings guide you) –Henry David Thoreau (French Enlightener) simplicity, anti-materialism, anti-society Unitarian Movement (spiritualism) –Logic & Reason over emotions to perfection Utopian Societies (perfect society) –Anti Industrial Society Movement

19 Utopian SocietiesUtopian Societies (perfect society) –Create their own society (opposite of current) –Combine Individual Freedom with Common Ownership (Socialism) *doesn’t work Richard Owen –New Harmony, IN

20 Penitentiary Reform Dorothea Dix (1802-1887) 1821  first penitentiary founded in Auburn, NY R1-5/7

21 Dorothea Dix Asylum - 1849

22 Religious Training  Secular Education *early IVY League * other training MA  always on the forefront of public educational reform * 1 st state to establish tax support for local public schools. By 1860 every state offered free public education. * US had the highest literacy rates in the world.

23 Education Reform Expands –Northwest Ordinance of 1787 required SCHOOLS to be built within the town –Mass. & Vermont compulsory Education Laws Universal Public Education 1850’s Public Tax Supported School –Teaching Values – Citizenship REPUBLICAN VALUES –McGuffy Readers Textbook –Horace Mann / school reformer Father of American Education

24  Used religious parables to teach “American values.”  Teach middle class morality and respect for order.  Teach “3 R’s” ( R eading, w R iting & a R ithmatic)  + “Protestant ethic” (Republican Virtues) (frugality, hard work, humility, sobriety) R3-8

25 Women Educators Troy, NY - Female Seminary * curriculum: math, physics, history, geography. * train female teachers Emma Willard (1787-1870) Mary Lyons (1797-1849) 1837  she established Mt. Holyoke [So. Hadley, MA] as the first college for women.

26 The 2 nd Great Awakening inspired women to improve society. Angelina GrimkéSarah Grimké Southern Abolitionists Lucy Stone American Women’s Suffrage Assoc. Edited Woman’s Journal R2-9

27 Women’s Rights Movement Laws Limit Women’s Rights (customs – Cult of Domesticity) Religious Inspiration / Social Concerns Abolition Movement / Women’s Rights Sarah & Angelina Grimke –1836 Appeal to Christian Women of South –Southern ABOLITIONISTS

28 1840  split in the abolitionist movement over women’s role in it. London  World Anti-Slavery Convention (NO Women allowed) Lucretia Mott Elizabeth Cady Stanton 1848  Seneca Falls Declaration of Sentiments R2-6/7

29 Women’s Rights Movement Religious Inspiration / Social Concerns Abolition Movement / Women’s Rights Laws Limit Women’s Rights (customs – Cult of Domesticity) Sarah & Angelina Grimke –1836 Appeal to Christian Women of South 1840 World Anti-Slavery Convention – women excluded Seneca Falls Convention

30 Seneca Falls Convention (1st) Lucretia Mott, Elizabeth Cady Stanton –Women’s Suffrage - (right to vote) Education -by 1890 2,500 graduate from colleges Elizabeth Blackwell (1st Medical Dr.) -1857 starts 1st U.S. school of Nursing Dorethea Dix (Improve prisons /Mental Hospitals)

31 Temperance Movement Frances Willard The Beecher Family 1826 - American Temperance Society “Demon Rum”! R1-6

32 “The Drunkard’s Progress” From the first glass to the grave, 1846

33 Temperance Movement –Abstinence (NOT drink alcohol) –Fix social problems by attacking the root of the problems

34 Alcohol consumption as it relates to major SOCIAL PROBLEMS: –Abuse –Lack of Parenting –Crime –Poverty –Etc…. Will lead to PROHIBITION in the 1900’s –NO making, selling, distribution of Alcohol


Download ppt "CREATING AMERICAN CULTURE Cultural Nationalism –Literature / Art –Values / Virtues Religious Reforms Women’s Reforms Slavery & Abolition Economics & Immigration."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google