Civil War & Abolitionist Literature
The Progressive Era
World War 1
The Great Gatsby &
The Jazz Age
Vocabulary
100

Enslaved people’s narratives, abolitionist essays, and novels brought the horrors of slavery into American homes, forcing readers to confront its brutality. The writings of this genre of abolitionist literature were personalizing injustice through ____________. (Fiction/Nonfiction)

Nonfiction

100

Author of The Great Gatsby

F. Scott Fitzgerald

100
In the MAIN causes of WWI, the letter "A" stands for...

Alliances

100

Narrator of TGG

Nick Carraway

100

An inner sense of what is morally right or wrong

conscience

200

Author of Uncle Tom's Cabin, this female author of the abolitionist era was rumored to have been credited with starting the Civil War by President Abraham Lincoln.

Harriet Beecher Stowe

200

NOT a key problem of the Progressive Era: 

wealth inequality,

destruction/aftermath of World War 1 

unsafe working conditions,

child labor

destruction/aftermath of World War 1 

200

This piece of literature, intercepted by the British and turned over to America, suggested an alliance between Germany and Mexico, and greatly influenced Americans' decision to support the war effort

Zimmerman telegram 

200

Nick's cousin (FIRST AND LAST NAME!) 

Daisy Buchanan 

200

The practice of taking action to create social or political change

Activism

300

Abolitionists who used newspapers, essays and speeches to shape public thought were utilizing THIS genre of abolitionist literature.

Journalism

300

Key reformer of the Progressive Era who wrote a book exposing conditions and overcrowding in NYC's tenement buildings

Jacob Riis

300
This genre of literature was particularly influential in influencing support for the war, describing conditions in the trenches and the horrors of chemical warfare 

Poetry

300

Where did Nick and Tom go to college? 

Yale

300

The act of setting someone or something free from oppression, confinement, or slavery

Liberation

400

This poem, by abolitionist author Frances Ellen Watkins Harper, used emotional appeal to make the reader feel the grief and suffering of an enslaved woman being separated from her child.

The Slave Mother

400

author of How the Other Half Lives

Jacob Riis

400

American author of the poem, "With the Tide," she wrote the poem to honor her friend, President Theodore Roosevelt, on the occasion of his death

Edith Wharton

400

Tom's mistress (FIRST AND LAST NAME!) 

Myrtle Wilson

400

Extremely small; too small to be measured or noticed

Infinitesimal

500

Along with ethos and pathos, this type of persuasive appeal was widely used by abolitionist authors.

logos

500

How the Other Half Lives was an example of this genre of non-fiction

photojournalism 

500

Main protagonist of the novel A Farewell to Arms, he falls in love with Nurse Catherine Barkley at a WW1 hospital where he is recovering

Frederic Henry

500

Symbolic halfway point between East/West Egg New York and New York City, representing moral decay and depravity

The Valley of Ashes

500

Displaying a lack of energy; slow, relaxed, or weak

Languid