Colonial Era
Revolutionary Era
Antebellum Period
Realism/ Regionalism
Modernism
100

Explain the term Eurocentrism and name at least one example

Eurocentrism is the tendency to view the world from a European or Western perspective, often assuming it is superior. Example: "Discovery"

100

What important document declared the colonies’ independence and when?

The Declaration of Independence in 1776

100

What were the major developments regarding technology/ transportation?

1840s: expansion of railroads to the west

first steamboats on Hudson river

constructing canals (Erie Canal) & economical forms of distribution 

→ increasing urbanization, increasing industrialisation

100

What is Regionalism about?

Focuses on customs, manners, and local color of specific U.S. regions

100

What are typical modernist features?

innovation, abstraction, fragmentation, disjunction, disruption & break from tradition

(free verse, unreliable narrators...)

200

Name 3 common literary genres during the Colonial Era.

  • Autobiography

  • Sermons – to instruct and guide religious life 

  • (Travel)Diaries and journals – personal reflections and records of daily life.

  • Poetry – often spiritual or reflective

  • Letters 

200

What does “tabula rasa” mean?

The idea that the human mind is a blank slate shaped by experience (John Locke).

200

What is the significance of Young Goodman Brown’s encounters in the forest?

  • Reveals that evil exists in everyone, even respected Puritans

  • Shows the contrast between outward piety and inner sin

  • Challenges Goodman Brown’s faith and moral certainty, reflecting on human nature and Puritan society

200

Explain the term verisimilitude

the truth of appearance/semblance to reality, the quality of seeming true

200

What is the Harlem Renaissance?

A cultural, artistic, and literary movement in which African Americans created and celebrated a distinct Black identity

emerged due to the Great Migration out of the South

300

What are typical features of Puritan writing?

  • use of plain style → simple, clear, and direct language
    → absence of rhetorical ornamentation
  • didactic purpose
  • often includes self-examination
  • parallelism between their lives & the bible
300

What intellectual movement strongly influenced the American Revolution? And what was it about?

The Enlightenment movement emphasized reason, science, individual rights, and skepticism toward authority.

300

What were main ideas of the Transcendentalist movement?

  • Humans born pure, corrupted by society

  • Emphasis on individualism and self-reliance

  • Nature has spiritual and moral power

300

Why was the Gilded Age considered “gilded”?

  • Wealth and progress covered underlying social problems.

  • Economic growth benefited few, while many lived in poverty (dire working conditions...)

  • Political corruption and exploitation were widespread.

300

What are the core principles of Imagism?

Conciseness: short, clear language; no unnecessary words.

focus on images instead of explanations

Free form: no need for rhyme or fixed meter.

400

How are Native Americans portrayed in Rowlandson’s narrative?

As “savages” or “hell-hounds,” reflecting a Eurocentric perspective (ignoring the historical reasons for their resistance).

Acts of kindness (e.g., giving her a Bible..) are not seen as Native mercy but as God’s providence


400

How does Thomas Paine portray Britain in Common Sense?

As an abusive mother/unnatural parent who exploits and harms her colonies.

400

How does Dickinson’s poem reflect Civil War imagery?

"Autumn" in quotation marks & the name of IT is.. (it must be sth. different than Autumn)

words that allude to the semantic field of redness

“a vein along the road” → refers to “Bloody Line”: 700m stretch with +5000 soldiers lying dead

400

What is the hypocrisy of Armand neglecting his mixed-race baby in Désirée’s Baby?

ignoring that white men commonly had children with slaves (Armand had a quadroon-boy himself)

& it turns out that Armand himself has Black ancestry (not Desiree)



400

How is segregation portrayed in "I, Too"?

  • the kitchen marks exclusion and segregation

  • the table signals inclusion and equalit

  • allusion to Whitman's poem “I hear America singing”

500

How do Puritan beliefs shape the interpretation of suffering in Bradstreet and Rowlandson?

Both see suffering as part of God’s divine plan and as a spiritual test meant to strengthen faith.

500

How does the mindset change from the Colonial to the Revolutionary Era?

The focus shifts from religious obedience and predestination to reason, individual rights, self-governance, and national identity.

500

Discuss how Poe’s The Fall of the House of Usher and Thoreau’s Walden differ in their treatment of isolation.

  • Thoreau: voluntary, positive, self-reflective isolation

  • Poe: forced, negative, leads to madness and decay

  • Nature / setting mirrors psychological states

500

Why is Editha a typical example of Realist literature?

Everyday life & ordinary people

Authentic dialogue & language

blurring nonfiction & fiction (fictional characters)

Learning process

Critiques social conventions and exposes the gap between appearance (romanticized war) and reality (George’s death).

500

What concepts of “kingdoms” is conveyed in "The Hollow Men"?

  • 2 kingdoms: “our kingdom” (this world) & “the other kingdom” (the other world: paradise, heaven, death)

  • Death’s kingdom instead of Heaven’s suggests speaker is depressed & wishes to be dead too 
  • The hollow men exist in a state of in-betweenness, unable to enter the spiritual kingdom but also unable to act meaningfully in the worldly one.

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