Now, our advice for using this book: Don’t feel you have to read all of any given chapter on a single tank of gas. And don’t feel you have to get from point A to point B by lunchtime; better to slow down and enjoy the scenery. Do, however, try to stay alert. Even with the potholes fixed, you’ll want to be braced for hairpin turns (and the occasional five-car collision) up ahead.
American Literature 101
You signed up for it thinking it would be a breeze. After all, you’d read most of the stuff back in high school, hadn’t you?
Or had you? As it turned out, the thing you remembered best about Moby-Dick was the expression on Gregory Peck’s face as he and the whale went down for the last time. And was it really The Scarlet Letter you liked so much? Or was it the Classics Illustrated version of The Scarlet Letter? Of course, you weren’t the only one who overestimated your familiarity with your literary heritage; your professor was busy making the same mistake.
Then there was the material itself, much of it so bad it made you wish you’d signed up for The Nineteenth Century French Noveclass="underline" Stendhal to Zola instead. Now that you’re older, though, you may be willing to make allowances. After all, the literary figures you were most likely to encounter the first semester were by and large only moonlighting as writers. They had to spend the bulk of their time building a nation, framing a constitution, carving a civilization out of the wilderness, or simply busting their chops trying to make a living. In those days, no one was about to fork over six figures so some Puritan could lie around Malibu polishing a screenplay.
Try, then, to think only kind and patriotic thoughts as, with the help of this chart, you refresh your memory on all those things you were asked to face—or to face again—in your freshman introduction to American Lit. JONATHAN EDWARDS (1703-1758)
Product of:
Northampton, Massachusetts, where he ruled from the pulpit for thirty years; Stockbridge, Massachusetts, where he became an Indian missionary after the townspeople of Northampton got fed up with him.
Earned a Living as a:
Clergyman, theologian.
High-School Reading List:
The sermon, “Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God” (1741), the most famous example of “the preaching of terror.”
Jonathan Edwards’ church, Northampton, Massachusetts
College Reading List:
Any number of sermons, notably “God Glorified in the Work of Redemption by the Greatness of Man’s Dependence on Him in the Whole of It” (1731), Edwards’ first sermon, in which he pinpoints the moral failings of New Englanders; and “A Faithful Narrative of the Surprising Work of God” (1737), describing various types and stages of religious conversion. Also, if your college professor was a fundamentalist, a New Englander, or simply sadistic, one or two of the treatises, e.g., “A Careful and Strict Enquiry into the Freedom of the Will” (1754), or the “Great Christian Doctrine of Original Sin Defended” (1758). Not to be missed: a dip into Edwards’ Personal Narrative, which suggests the psychological connection between being America’s number-one Puritan clergyman and the only son in a family with eleven children.
What You Were Supposed to Have Learned in High Schooclass="underline"
Edwards’ historical importance as quintessential Puritan thinker and hero of the Great Awakening, the religious revival that swept New England from the late 1730s to 1750.
What You Didn’t Find Out Until College:
What Edwards thought about, namely, the need to get back to the old-fashioned Calvinist belief in man’s basic depravity and in his total dependence on God’s goodwill for salvation. (Forget about the “covenant” theory of Protestantism; according to Edwards, God doesn’t bother cutting deals with humans.) Also, his insistence that faith and conversion be emotional, not just intellectual. BENJAMIN FRANKLIN (1706-1790)
Product of:
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
Earned a Living as a:
Printer, promoter, inventor, diplomat, statesman.
High-School Reading List:
The Declaration of Independence (1776), which he helped draft.
College Reading List:
The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin (1771– 1788), considered one of the greatest autobiographies ever written; sample maxims from Poor Richard’s Almanack (1732–1757), mostly on how to make money or keep from spending it; any number of articles and essays on topics of historical interest, ranging from “Rules by Which a Great Empire May Be Reduced to a Small One,” and “An Edict by the King of Prussia” (both 1773), about the colonies’ Great Britain problem, to “Experiments and Observations on Electricity” (1751), all of which are quite painless.
What You Were Supposed to Have Learned in High Schooclass="underline"
Not a thing. But back in grade school you presumably learned that Franklin invented a stove, bifocal glasses, and the lightning rod; that he established the first, or almost the first, library, fire department, hospital, and insurance company; that he helped negotiate the treaty with France that allowed America to win independence; that he was a member of the Constitutional Convention; that he was the most famous American of the eighteenth century (after George Washington) and the closest thing we’ve ever had to a Renaissance man.
What You Didn’t Find Out Until College:
That Franklin had as many detractors as admirers, for whom his shrewdness, pettiness, hypocrisy, and nonstop philandering embodied all the worst traits of the American character, of American capitalism, and of the Protestant ethic. WASHINGTON IRVING (1783-1859)
Washington Irving’s house, Tarrytown, New York
Product of:
New York City and Tarrytown, New York.
Earned a Living as a:
Writer; also, briefly, a diplomat.
High-School Reading List:
“Rip Van Winkle” and “The Legend of Sleepy Hollow,” both contained in The Sketch Book (1820).
College Reading List:
Other more or less interchangeable selections from The Sketch Book, Bracebridge Hall (1822), Tales of a Traveller (1824), or The Legends of the Alhambra (1832), none of which stuck in anyone’s memory for more than ten minutes.
What You Were Supposed to Have Learned in High Schooclass="underline"
That Irving was the first to prove that Americans could write as well as Europeans; that Ichabod Crane and Rip Van Winkle’s wife both got what they deserved.
What You Didn’t Find Out Until College:
That Irving’s grace as a stylist didn’t quite make up for his utter lack of originality, insight, or depth. JAMES FENIMORE COOPER (1789-1851)