Writing the Nation A Concise Introduction to American Literature 1865 to Present

1

Walt Whitman

1.3 Walt Whitman

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

Walt Whitman emerged as the journeyman poet and champion of American-ness by celebrating the common people and everyday life through innovative free verse that married embedded cultural forms to the needs of a rapidly modernizing nation.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • Who Whitman was: a working-class journalist and editor who held many jobs (law clerk, schoolteacher, printer, civil servant, hospital aide) and wrote constantly from his teenage years until his death.
  • What made his poetry distinctive: he used free verse without rhyme and meter, simple language, clear images, and deep rhythms to celebrate the ordinary and the common people.
  • How Leaves of Grass evolved: the first edition in 1855 contained just twelve poems; by his death in 1892, it had expanded over six editions to more than 400 poems.
  • Common confusion—"loafing" vs. industry: Whitman was accused of idleness because of his long midday walks, but he believed too much industry dulled the ability to celebrate the ordinary; his "loafing" was actually a form of observation and creative work.
  • Why he matters: Whitman inspired successive generations of American authors (Mark Twain, Stephen Crane, Charles Chesnutt, realists, Modernist poets) by demonstrating the freedom to use American dialects, the richness of the American landscape, and new poetical forms.

🎭 The poet of the common people

🎭 Whitman's background and work ethic

  • Born in 1819 to a Long Island farmer and carpenter, second of nine children.
  • Worked many jobs throughout his life but was always writing; his byline was on constant view from his teenage years until his death.
  • Contemporary reports suggest he was industrious, but his habit of long midday walks contrasted sharply with nineteenth-century attitudes toward work.

🌾 Celebration of the ordinary

In the preface to the first edition of Leaves of Grass (1855): "the genius of the United States is not best or most in its executives or legislators, nor in its ambassadors or authors or colleges or churches or parlors, nor even in its newspapers or inventors…but always most in the common people."

  • Whitman's love for the common people he encountered and observed in the urban centers of the north is expressed in all of his poetry.
  • If his British contemporary Alfred Lord Tennyson is the national poet of mourning, then Whitman is the national poet of celebration.
  • Example: In "Song of Myself," he directly addresses critics of his "loafing": "I loafe and invite my soul,/ I lean and loafe at my ease observing a spear of summer grass" (lines 4-5).

🏙️ Urban poet with universal appeal

  • Lived almost his entire life in New York, New Jersey, and Washington, DC.
  • The enduring appeal of his works testifies to his ability to connect the great and the common through language.
  • Don't confuse: Though he was an urban poet, his work resonates beyond city life because he captured universal human experiences.

📖 Leaves of Grass and poetic innovation

📖 The evolution of the collection

  • First published in 1855 when Whitman was just twenty-five years old.
  • Grand in scope if not in size: the first edition established Whitman as a poet who loved wordplay and common images.
  • Expanded over six editions from twelve poems to more than 400 poems by his death in 1892.

✍️ Free verse technique

  • Many readers feel confused and disoriented when reading Whitman for the first time.
  • Without using rhyme and meter as a guide, Whitman's poetry may initially appear disjointed and meandering.
  • At the same time, readers often take great comfort in:
    • The simplicity of the language
    • The clarity of the images
    • The deep cadences, or rhythms, of the verse
  • Such contradictions are at the heart of Whitman's work.

🔗 Marrying form to national needs

  • Much of Whitman's success and endurance as a poet comes from his ability to marry embedded cultural forms to the needs of a growing and rapidly modernizing nation.
  • He came to wide public attention with the first edition of Leaves of Grass in 1855.
  • The selections in this textbook largely sample Whitman's early poetry up through the Civil War.

🌟 Key poems and themes

🌟 "Song of Myself"

  • Shows Whitman at his most iconic: sweeping views of everyday life that freely mingle high and low culture.
  • Celebrates the self and the connection between the individual and all of humanity.
  • Example: "I CELEBRATE myself, and sing myself, / And what I assume you shall assume, / For every atom belonging to me as good belongs to you."

🌉 "Crossing Brooklyn Ferry"

  • Another example of Whitman's iconic style: sweeping views of everyday life that freely mingle high and low culture.
  • Connects the poet's present experience with future generations crossing the same ferry.

🇺🇸 "O Captain! My Captain!"

  • Shows Whitman rising as a national poet.
  • One of two poems on the death of Abraham Lincoln.
  • Demonstrates how the poet of the common man did not spend all his days gazing at fellow Americans but also addressed national tragedy.

🌊 Historical and literary context

🌊 The Civil War as dividing line

  • The Civil War, while not a precise dividing line, is regarded as the most reliable current method for marking the split between the first and second half of the literary history of the United States.
  • The national coming of age occurred in the years of Reconstruction, Western Expansion, Manifest Destiny, industrial might, and rapid immigration.
  • This period marks the traditional beginning of courses on American literature.

📚 Literary periods and fluid boundaries

  • The collection of readings follows divisions into Late Romanticism, Realism, Naturalism, Pre-Modernism, Modernism, and post-1945 American Literature.
  • However, the boundaries between these divisions remain fluid.
  • Readers are encouraged to draw connections beyond the loose boundaries and invent new terms that better describe these works.

🎨 Influence on later writers

  • Whitman inspired successive generations of American authors.
  • From his poetry, Mark Twain, Stephen Crane, and Charles Chesnutt found the freedom to use a variety of American dialects in their work.
  • The realists of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries discovered the richness of the American landscape.
  • The Modernist poets located a source of new poetical forms to meet the needs of the adolescent Republic that came of age in the decades immediately following the Civil War.
2

Emily Dickinson

1.4 Emily Dickinson

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

Emily Dickinson's technically complex and innovative poetry demonstrates mastery of the lyric form while celebrating individual will, the natural world, and mortality through precise language that predated Modernism by three-quarters of a century.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • Technical innovation: Dickinson's poetry displays technical complexity that predated Modernist poets like T. S. Eliot and Ezra Pound by almost seventy-five years.
  • Control and privacy: She exerted almost singular control over the distribution of her poetry during her lifetime, contrary to popular depictions of her as fragile or timid.
  • Lyric mastery: Her poems are short lyrics expressing single themes through vibrant language, wordplay, and natural imagery.
  • Common confusion: Early portrayals depicted her as reclusive and trapped by gender confines, but recent scholarship reveals this "Belle of Amherst" image as fallacious.
  • Core themes: Her poetry combines mortality and desire, celebrating individual will and the soul's independence while showing precise control over relationships to nature and the divine.

👤 Life and education

🏛️ Family background and education

  • Born in 1830 into an influential and socially prominent New England family.
  • Middle child of Edward Dickinson and Emily Norcross, with older brother Austin and younger sister Lavinia.
  • Benefited from extensive formal education—a level most contemporaries, female and male, could not comprehend.
  • Received informal education through countless visitors during her father's political career.

🏠 Choice of isolation

  • Contrary to popular depictions, Dickinson did travel outside of Amherst.
  • She ultimately chose to remain at home in close company of family and friends.
  • An intensely private person who controlled distribution of her poetry.
  • Don't confuse: Her choice to stay home was deliberate, not evidence of fragility or being "trapped."

🎨 Poetic technique and innovation

📝 The lyric form

Lyric: a short poem that often expresses a single theme such as the speaker's mood or feeling.

  • Dickinson mastered this form during her most prolific years (1861-1865).
  • Her lyrics are formal, mysterious, concise, and clever.
  • Like Walt Whitman, she used poetry to show readers familiar landscapes from fresh perspectives.

🔧 Technical elements

  • Vibrant language: Demonstrates vital spark contrasting with her reclusive image.
  • Wordplay: Example in "I taste a liquor never brewed—" where "liquor" indicates both alcoholic beverage (first stanza) and rich nectar (third stanza).
  • Natural imagery: Uses well-known images of power and authority alongside natural elements.
  • Precise control: Shows careful management of speaker's relationship to natural world and divine.

🚀 Modernist precursor

  • Her technical complexity predates Modernism of T. S. Eliot, Ezra Pound, William Carlos Williams, and Marianne Moore by almost three-quarters of a century.
  • Embraced techniques that were new to the nineteenth century.
  • Recent scholarship demonstrates the fallacy of depicting her as merely the ghostly "Belle of Amherst."

📖 Four representative poems

🍷 "I taste a liquor never brewed"

  • Celebrates the poet's relationship to the natural world.
  • Uses wordplay: "liquor" means both alcoholic beverage and rich nectar.
  • Speaker becomes "Inebriate of air" and "debauchee of dew."
  • Vibrant language demonstrates vital spark, not timidity.
  • Example: The speaker will drink more than bees and butterflies, until "seraphs swing their snowy hats" and "saints to windows run."

👑 "The Soul selects her own Society"

  • Celebrates independence of the soul in face of expectations.
  • Uses images of power and authority: chariots, emperors, nations.
  • Shows soul's ability to choose one from "an ample nation" then "close the valves of her attention / Like stone."
  • Demonstrates celebration of individual will engaging fully with life without becoming enslaved.
  • Forms important pair with "Because I could not stop for Death" in showing precise control over relationships.

💀 "Because I could not stop for Death"

  • One of the most famous poems in the Dickinson canon.
  • Death personified as kind figure who "stopped for me."
  • Carriage journey passes school, fields, setting sun—natural progression of life.
  • Key insight: Omnipresence of death does not mean death is immanent.
  • While death cannot be avoided, neither is it to be feared.
  • Shows speaker's relationship to both natural world and divine.

🔫 "My Life had stood—a Loaded Gun"

  • Plays with preconceptions of death and energy.
  • Energy appears always waiting for someone to unleash it.
  • Speaker as gun "In Corners—till a Day / The Owner passed—identified."
  • Paradox in final lines: "I have but the power to kill, / Without—the power to die."
  • Demonstrates range of Dickinson's reach as poet.

🎯 Thematic synthesis

🌿 Individual will and engagement

  • Both "I taste a liquor never brewed" and "The Soul selects her own Society" celebrate individual will.
  • Speakers engage fully with life without becoming either intoxicated or enslaved.
  • Shows vitality and agency, not passivity or fragility.

⚰️ Mortality and desire combined

ThemeHow Dickinson treats itEffect
DeathAlways present and potential, but not immanentRemoves fear while acknowledging reality
Natural worldSource of vitality and relationshipAwakens imagination and awareness
Individual soulIndependent, selective, powerfulCelebrates autonomy
Energy/potentialWaiting to be unleashedShows latent power

🌍 Awakening imagination and awareness

  • Precise lyrics combine mortality and desire.
  • Awaken both imagination and awareness of natural world.
  • Four poems together demonstrate full range of Dickinson's reach as poet.
  • Don't confuse: Themes of death and isolation don't make poems melancholy—vibrant language and celebration of will prevent solemnity.
3

Mark Twain

2.3 Mark Twain

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

Mark Twain became one of the most influential figures of American Literary Realism by using dialect, regional humor, satire, and stories featuring outsiders, drawing on his experiences on the Mississippi River and in the American West.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • Who Twain was: pen name of Samuel Langhorne Clemens; trained as a riverboat pilot on the Mississippi, then became a journalist and writer in the West.
  • What made him famous: achieved international fame during his lifetime; wrote classics like The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Tom Sawyer, Roughing It!, and Innocents Abroad.
  • His signature techniques: use of dialect, regional humor, satire, and meta-fiction (story within a story); repeated theme of outsiders entering new places or locals being tricked by outsiders.
  • Common confusion: Roughing It! was claimed to be non-fiction but contained many exaggerated or untrue stories—Twain blurred the line between fact and fiction.
  • Why he matters: one of the most important figures of American Literary Realism; his work contributed to defining the movement's style and themes.

🌊 Life and influences

🏞️ Early life and the Mississippi River

  • Born in Florida, Missouri; grew up in Hannibal, Missouri, near the Mississippi River.
  • The river location was a major influence on his work and served as the setting for many stories.
  • Originally apprenticed as a printer, then spent eighteen months training as a riverboat pilot.
  • The pen name "Mark Twain" is a reference to a nautical term from his piloting days.

⚔️ Civil War and the move West

  • By 1861, Civil War slowed Mississippi River traffic, forcing Twain to abandon his riverboat dreams.
  • Twain claims to have spent two weeks in the Marion Rangers, a poorly organized local Confederate militia.
  • In 1861, his brother Orion was appointed Secretary of Nevada by President Lincoln; Twain accompanied him as Assistant Secretary of Nevada.
  • His Western adventures became the material for Roughing It! (1872).

📰 Journalism career

  • Made a name for himself as a journalist while living out West.
  • Eventually served as editor of the Virginia City Daily Territorial Enterprise.
  • Rose to prominence as a multi-talented writer, journalist, humorist, memoirist, novelist, and public speaker.

📚 Major works and achievements

🏆 Fame and classic books

  • Achieved fame during his lifetime and was hailed as America's most famous writer.
  • Major works include:
    • The Adventures of Tom Sawyer (1876)
    • The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1884)
    • Roughing It! (1872)
    • Innocents Abroad (1869)
    • Life on the Mississippi (1883)
    • A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court (1889)

🗣️ Signature style and themes

Twain's techniques: use of dialect, regional humor, and satire.

  • Repeated theme: jokes at the expense of an outsider, or stories featuring an outsider who comes to fleece locals.
  • Example: In "The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County," an outsider enters a new place and tricks a local—a staple in Twain's work.

🎭 Meta-fiction and storytelling innovation

  • In "The Celebrated Jumping Frog," Twain experiments with early versions of meta-fiction by embedding a story within a story.
  • The story relies on local color humor and regional dialect (e.g., "Why blame my cats").
  • The narrator is sent to find "Leonidas W. Smiley" but instead hears a long tale about "Jim Smiley"—the frame story sets up the embedded narrative.

🌵 Roughing It! and Western adventures

🗺️ What the book covers

  • Details Twain's travels out West from 1861–1867.
  • Describes many adventures: visiting with outlaws and strange characters, encounters with notable figures like Brigham Young and Horace Greeley.
  • Provided descriptions of the frontier from Nevada to San Francisco to Hawaii to an audience largely unfamiliar with the area.

⚠️ Fact vs. fiction

  • Twain claimed Roughing It! to be a work of non-fiction.
  • However, it features many fantastic stories, several of which were exaggerated or untrue.
  • Don't confuse: Twain's "non-fiction" label with strict factual accuracy—he blended real experiences with embellishment and invention.

🐸 "The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County"

📖 Story structure and technique

  • Also published under alternate titles: "Jim Smiley and His Jumping Frog" and "The Notorious Jumping Frog of Calaveras County."
  • Uses a frame narrative: the narrator is sent by a friend to ask Simon Wheeler about "Leonidas W. Smiley," but Wheeler instead tells a long story about "Jim Smiley."
  • The narrator suspects this is a prank—that "Leonidas W. Smiley is a myth" and his friend knew Wheeler would "bore me to death" with the Jim Smiley story.

🎪 Regional humor and dialect

  • Wheeler tells the story in regional dialect and with a deadpan delivery: "He never smiled, he never frowned, he never changed his voice."
  • The narrator notes Wheeler's "impressive earnestness and sincerity," showing Wheeler regards the story as "a really important matter" and admires Jim Smiley and the stranger as "men of transcendent genius in finesse."
  • Example of dialect: "Why, blame my cats if he don't weigh five pound!"

🎲 The story of Jim Smiley

  • Jim Smiley was "the curiosest man about always betting on anything that turned up you ever see."
  • He would bet on any side, as long as he got a bet; "he most always come out winner."
  • Examples of his bets: horse races, dog fights, cat fights, chicken fights, which bird would fly first, even how long a straddle-bug would take to reach its destination.
  • He once bet on Parson Walker's sick wife: "Well, I'll resk two-and-a-half she don't anyway."

🐕 Smiley's animals

  • The fifteen-minute nag: a slow mare with asthma, distemper, or consumption, but she always won at the last moment.
  • Andrew Jackson the bull-pup: looked worthless but became fierce when money was bet on him; would grab the other dog's hind leg and hang on until the opponent gave up. Lost only once, when matched against a dog with no hind legs (sawed off in a circular saw)—couldn't use his "main dependence in a fight," looked discouraged, and died. The narrator reflects: "It always makes me feel sorry when I think of that last fight of his'n."

🐸 Dan'l Webster the frog

  • Smiley caught a frog and spent three months teaching it to jump.
  • The frog could catch flies perfectly and could "get over more ground at one straddle than any animal of his breed you ever see."
  • Smiley was "monstrous proud of his frog" and would bet money on it.

🎯 The trick and the outsider theme

  • A stranger came to town and asked what was in Smiley's box.
  • Smiley said it was "only just a frog" that could "outjump any frog in Calaveras county."
  • The stranger said he didn't see anything special about the frog but agreed to bet if he had a frog.
  • Smiley went to the swamp to catch another frog; while he was gone, the stranger "prized [Dan'l's] mouth open and took a teaspoon and filled him full of quail shot—filled him pretty near up to his chin."
  • In the contest, the new frog hopped off, but Dan'l "couldn't budge; he was planted as solid as a church."
  • The stranger took the money and left; Smiley later discovered Dan'l weighed five pounds and "belched out a double handful of shot."
  • Smiley "was the maddest man" and chased the stranger but never caught him.
  • Outsider theme: the stranger enters the camp, tricks the local (Smiley), and escapes—a recurring pattern in Twain's work.

🔄 The frame returns

  • Wheeler is called away; the narrator uses the opportunity to escape, not wanting to hear more about Smiley's "yaller one-eyed cow."
  • The frame reinforces the meta-fiction: the narrator's quest for "Leonidas W. Smiley" was a setup to trap him into hearing Wheeler's long tale.

🌐 Roughing It excerpt

🏙️ Arriving in Overland City

  • The narrator describes the strange feeling of seeing a town again after "a long acquaintance with deep, still, almost lifeless and houseless solitude."
  • "We tumbled out into the busy street feeling like meteoric people crumbled off the corner of some other world, and wakened up suddenly in this."
  • For an hour, they took as much interest in Overland City "as if we had never seen a town before."
  • This passage illustrates Twain's use of vivid, humorous description to convey the disorientation and wonder of frontier travel.

🎭 "The War Prayer" and satire

✍️ Irony and critique

  • "The War Prayer" is a satire of the Spanish-American War (1898).
  • The story was originally rejected during Twain's lifetime.
  • Begins as a prayer for American soldiers, then continues to highlight "many of the horrors of war."
  • Twain proves to be "a master of irony" by using the prayer format to expose the darker consequences of war.
4

2.4 William Dean Howells

2.4 William Dean Howells

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

The excerpt provided contains narrative passages from Mark Twain's works ("The Celebrated Jumping Frog" and Roughing It) rather than substantive content about William Dean Howells.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • The excerpt does not contain information about William Dean Howells himself.
  • The text includes a story about a frog-jumping contest where one character cheats by filling a frog with quail shot.
  • A brief passage describes travelers arriving in Overland City after time in solitude.
  • The excerpts appear to be from Mark Twain's works illustrating Realism period literature (1865-1890).
  • No theoretical, biographical, or critical content about Howells is present in the source material.

📖 Content mismatch

📖 What the excerpt contains

The source material consists of:

  • A narrative conclusion from "The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County" (the cheating incident and aftermath)
  • The opening of Chapter VII from Roughing It (arrival in a town)
  • Page headers indicating "Writing the Nation: Realism (1865-1890)"

❌ What is missing

  • No biographical information about William Dean Howells
  • No discussion of Howells's literary theories or critical principles
  • No analysis of Howells's works or contributions to American Realism
  • No explanation of Howells's role in the Realism movement

🐸 Narrative content present

🐸 The frog story conclusion

The excerpt shows the climax and resolution of the jumping frog tale:

  • A stranger fills Dan'l Webster (Smiley's frog) with quail shot while Smiley fetches another frog
  • The weighted frog cannot jump: "he was planted as solid as a church"
  • Smiley discovers the deception when the frog weighs "five pound" and "belched out a double handful of shot"
  • The cheater escapes before Smiley can catch him

🏙️ The Overland City arrival

A brief descriptive passage:

  • Travelers experience disorientation arriving in a town after prolonged solitude
  • They feel "like meteoric people crumbled off the corner of some other world"
  • The contrast emphasizes the isolation of their previous environment

⚠️ Note for review

This excerpt does not provide material for studying William Dean Howells. To learn about Howells, a different source section containing actual content about his life, works, literary theory, or influence on American Realism would be required.

5

2.5 Ambrose Bierce

2.5 Ambrose Bierce

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

The excerpt presents narrative techniques from Mark Twain's works—including tall tales, unreliable narration, and satirical commentary—that illustrate how realism-era writers used humor and exaggeration to explore American character and critique social attitudes.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • Tall tale structure: stories like the jumping frog contest and the buffalo hunt use exaggeration and deadpan delivery to create humor while revealing character.
  • Unreliable narration and frame stories: narrators like Simon Wheeler and Bemis tell outlandish stories that test the listener's credulity, creating layers of irony.
  • Satire of social attitudes: "The War Prayer" uses dramatic irony to expose the unspoken violence behind patriotic fervor.
  • Common confusion: the humor is not just absurdity for its own sake—it reveals deeper truths about human nature, gullibility, and moral blindness.
  • Regional realism through dialect: vernacular speech patterns (e.g., "warn't," "ketched") ground fantastical stories in specific American settings and voices.

📖 Tall tale mechanics

🐸 The jumping frog contest

  • Setup: Smiley bets on his trained frog Dan'l Webster; a stranger accepts the bet but secretly fills Dan'l with quail shot while Smiley fetches another frog.
  • Climax: Dan'l "couldn't budge; he was planted as solid as a church" because he is weighted down; the stranger wins and leaves with the money.
  • Revelation: Smiley discovers Dan'l weighs "five pound" and "belched out a double handful of shot"—he realizes the trick too late.
  • Why it matters: the story uses physical comedy and dialect to satirize greed and gullibility; the stranger's deadpan remark ("I don't see no p'ints about that frog that's any better'n any other frog") underscores the irony.

🐂 Bemis and the buffalo

  • The story: Bemis claims a wounded buffalo chased him, his horse went mad with fear (standing on its head, shedding tears), and he escaped up a tree—then the bull climbed the tree after him, so Bemis lassoed it and shot it, leaving it "dangling in the air, twenty foot from the ground."
  • Listener skepticism: when asked for proof, Bemis replies, "Did I bring back my lariat? … Did I bring back my horse? … Well, then, what more do you want?"
  • Narrator's judgment: "if this man was not a liar he only missed it by the skin of his teeth."
  • Function: the tall tale tests the boundary between entertainment and deception; Bemis's defensive logic ("Because you never saw a thing done, is that any reason why it can't be done?") parodies the tall-tale teller's refusal to be pinned down.

🥥 Eckert's cat

  • The trap: Bascom plans to "draw out" the liar Eckert by acting uninterested, letting Eckert relax and start lying naturally.
  • The claim: Eckert says he has "a cat that will eat cocoanut … and not only eat the meat, but drink the milk."
  • The reversal: Bascom smugly calls for proof—and the cat does eat the coconut, "ravenously."
  • Outcome: Bascom and the narrator "rode our two miles in silence, and wide apart"; Bascom tells the narrator, "you need not speak of this—foolishness to the boys."
  • Irony: the "liar" tells the truth; the skeptic is humiliated; the excerpt shows how assumptions about truth and falsehood can be upended.

Don't confuse: these are not simply lies—they are performances that reveal character (the teller's bravado, the listener's credulity or arrogance).

🎭 Frame narratives and unreliable narrators

🗣️ Simon Wheeler's storytelling

  • The outer narrator seeks information about "Rev. Leonidas W. Smiley" but is trapped listening to Simon Wheeler's rambling tales about Jim Smiley.
  • Wheeler's delivery is earnest and "kinder sad like," with no hint of irony—he seems to believe every word.
  • The outer narrator escapes before hearing about "a yaller one-eyed cow that didn't have no tail, only jest a short stump like a bannanner."
  • Effect: the frame creates distance and irony; the reader sees both the tale and the teller's obliviousness.

🧳 The traveler's perspective in Roughing It

  • The narrator describes arriving in Overland City feeling "like meteoric people crumbled off the corner of some other world"—emphasizing the strangeness of frontier life.
  • Descriptions mix awe (the "noble sport" of the buffalo hunt) with deflation (the South Platte is "a melancholy stream" that looks "sick and sorry").
  • Function: the narrator's Eastern sensibility creates comic contrast with Western realities.

🏛️ Brigham Young's authority

  • Mr. Street's account of his contract dispute with Mormon sub-contractors:
    • Written contracts are "worthless" in Utah because Mormons ignore losing agreements.
    • Street goes to Brigham Young, who examines the papers, summons the contractors, and orders: "carry them out to the letter, if it makes paupers of you! Go!"
    • The contractors comply immediately.
  • Street's conclusion: "Utah is an absolute monarchy and Brigham Young is king!"
  • Narrative function: the anecdote illustrates the gap between official republican government and actual theocratic power; Street's businesslike tone makes the authoritarian reality more striking.

Don't confuse: the narrator's voice with the author's—Twain often uses naive or self-important narrators to create irony.

⚔️ Satire and moral critique

🙏 "The War Prayer" structure

  • Opening scene: a town in patriotic fervor—drums, flags, volunteers marching, mass meetings, church services invoking "the God of Battles."
  • Suppression of dissent: "the half dozen rash spirits that ventured to disapprove of the war … got such a stern and angry warning that … they quickly shrank out of sight."
  • The church service: a "long" prayer asks God to "watch over our noble young soldiers … shield them in the day of battle … help them to crush the foe, grant to them … imperishable honor and glory."
  • The stranger's entrance: an "aged stranger" in a robe, "unnaturally pale, pale even to ghastliness," ascends to the pulpit and announces, "I come from the Throne—bearing a message from Almighty God!"

💀 The unspoken prayer (implied)

  • The excerpt breaks off after "He has heard the prayer of His servant your shepherd, and will grant it if such shall be…"
  • Dramatic irony: the stranger is about to reveal the hidden meaning of the prayer—that asking for victory means asking for the enemy's suffering and death.
  • Satirical method: by staging the prayer as a church scene and introducing a supernatural messenger, Twain exposes the moral contradiction in praying for both divine blessing and violent triumph.

Example: The congregation prays for their soldiers to be "invincible in the bloody onset" and to "crush the foe"—but they do not consciously acknowledge that this means praying for the enemy's widows, orphans, and devastation.

🎖️ Patriotic fervor vs. moral awareness

ElementWhat the excerpt showsImplication
Public mood"holy fire of patriotism," cheering crowds, "cyclones of applause"Collective emotion drowns out individual moral judgment
DissentersSilenced by "stern and angry warning"Social pressure enforces conformity
Religious sanctionPastors "invoked the God of Battles"Religion is co-opted to legitimize violence
The strangerPale, ghostly, speaking for GodRepresents the repressed moral truth

Don't confuse: Twain's satire with simple anti-war polemic—the target is the unexamined fusion of piety and bloodlust, not patriotism or religion per se.

🗣️ Dialect and regional voice

📝 Vernacular authenticity

  • Simon Wheeler's speech: "warn't no use," "he ketched a frog," "I do wonder what in the nation that frog throw'd off for."
  • Bemis: "I wish I may die if he didn't stand on his head for a quarter of a minute and shed tears."
  • Function: dialect signals regional identity and social class; it also creates humor through incongruity (elevated subjects described in colloquial language).

🌄 Landscape and language

  • The South Platte: "shallow, yellow, muddy … a melancholy stream straggling through the centre of the enormous flat plain."
  • The desert crossing: "waterless, treeless, melancholy deserts … two days' journey from water to water."
  • Effect: precise, unglamorous description deflates romantic myths of the West; the language is matter-of-fact, even weary.

🤠 Character through speech

  • Eckert's polite, "pleasant-spoken, gentle-mannered" demeanor contrasts with his reputation as a liar—his calm tone makes his outlandish claim about the cat more effective.
  • Bascom's confident planning ("Let him shape the conversation to suit himself … I will make him lie") and his silent humiliation afterward reveal his arrogance.

Don't confuse: dialect with mockery—Twain uses vernacular speech to give characters dignity and authenticity, not to ridicule them.

🧩 Narrative techniques summary

🎪 Exaggeration and deadpan delivery

  • Tall tales rely on straight-faced narration of impossible events (a bull climbing a tree, a horse standing on its head and crying).
  • The humor comes from the gap between the narrator's earnestness and the listener's disbelief.

🪞 Irony and reversal

  • Bascom's plan to expose Eckert backfires when the cat really does eat coconut.
  • The stranger in "The War Prayer" is about to expose the congregation's moral blindness by making explicit what they implicitly pray for.

🎬 Frame and perspective

  • Outer narrators (the traveler in Roughing It, the seeker of Rev. Smiley) provide a skeptical or naive viewpoint that contrasts with the inner story.
  • This layering allows Twain to present tall tales without endorsing them, creating space for the reader's judgment.

🎯 Social critique through humor

  • The jumping frog story satirizes gambling and trickery.
  • The Brigham Young anecdote critiques theocratic power disguised as republican government.
  • "The War Prayer" uses religious imagery to indict the fusion of piety and violence.

Key takeaway: Twain's realism is not photographic accuracy but a method of revealing truth through exaggeration, irony, and the collision of perspectives.

6

Henry James

2.6 Henry James

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

Henry James, a leading proponent of American Literary Realism alongside Howells and Twain, pushed the boundaries of realistic fiction through psychological depth and experimental narrative techniques while exploring themes of cultural conflict and unfulfilled lives.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • Who James was: A wealthy New Yorker who lived most of his adult life in England, becoming a British citizen in 1915, one year before his death.
  • His role in Realism: Co-founder (with Howells and Twain) of American Literary Realism; wrote The Art of Fiction (1884) setting forth his theories.
  • How he differed from other Realists: Often called a "psychological Realist," James experimented more than Howells and Twain with point of view, unreliable narrators, and interior monologues.
  • Common confusion—Realism vs psychological Realism: While all three writers championed "life-like" fiction, James went further into characters' inner consciousness and subjective experience.
  • His major themes: Strong-willed women or precocious children versus conventional society; American-European cultural clashes; emotional devastation from unlived lives.

🏠 Life and background

🏠 Family and early years

  • Born in New York City in 1843 to a wealthy family.
  • Father Henry James, Sr. was a theologian and philosopher.
  • The family provided James and his siblings with extensive travel and exposure to different cultures and languages.
  • They lived abroad for several years before returning to America just before the Civil War.
  • Settled in Newport, Rhode Island, then Cambridge, Massachusetts.

🎓 Education and career choice

  • Unable to serve in the Union Army during the Civil War due to a physical disability.
  • Attended Harvard Law School.
  • Decided to embark on a life of traveling and writing instead of practicing law.
  • Eventually relocated to London in 1876, where he spent most of his adult life.

👤 Personal life

  • Never married; preferred to live alone.
  • Focused his personal time on reading and writing.
  • Was gregarious and well-connected to leading artists and intellectuals of his age despite living alone.
  • Received British citizenship in 1915, one year before his death.

📚 Literary career and influence

📚 Recognition and connections

  • His short works came to the attention of William Dean Howells, then assistant editor at The Atlantic Monthly in Boston.
  • James and Howells became proponents and literary theorists for the Realism movement in literature that had reached American shores.
  • Example: Howells, as a powerful editor, helped launch James's career by publishing his early work.

✍️ Theoretical contributions

James's The Art of Fiction (1884): a theoretical work setting forth many of James's ideas about the nature and importance of Realistic fiction.

  • James was one of the three leading proponents of American Literary Realism (along with Howells and Twain).
  • His theoretical writing helped define what Realism meant in the American context.
  • He articulated principles for how fiction should represent life authentically.

🧠 James's distinctive approach to Realism

🧠 Psychological Realism

  • Often described as a "psychological Realist."
  • This label distinguishes him from Howells and Twain.
  • What it means: James focused on the inner life—thoughts, feelings, consciousness—not just external actions and dialogue.
  • How he achieved it: Through experimental narrative techniques (see below).

🔬 Experimental techniques

James went further than Howells and Twain in terms of experimentation with point of view, particularly in:

TechniqueWhat it meansWhy it matters
Unreliable narratorsNarrators whose perception or honesty is questionableReaders must interpret what is "really" happening; adds psychological complexity
Interior monologuesExtended passages of a character's inner thoughtsReveals subjective reality and consciousness directly
Point of view manipulationShifting or limiting perspective to one character's mindCreates ambiguity and psychological depth
  • Don't confuse: All Realists aimed for "life-like" fiction, but James's focus on inner experience and subjective perception made his work distinctively psychological.
  • Example: An unreliable narrator might misinterpret events, forcing readers to read between the lines—this mirrors how people in real life often misunderstand their own experiences.

🎭 Major themes in James's work

🎭 Strong-willed individuals vs. society

  • Who: Strong-willed or precocious young women or children.
  • Conflict: These characters are at odds with the pressures of conventional society.
  • Why it matters: James explored how social expectations constrain individual freedom and authenticity.
  • Example: A young woman with independent ideas might face pressure to conform to traditional gender roles.

🌍 Transatlantic cultural clashes

  • What: Tensions arising from transatlantic travel and living abroad.
  • The clash: Americans experience conflicts between American and European cultures.
  • Why James focused on this: Having lived in both America and Europe, James understood these cultural differences firsthand.
  • Example: An American character might value directness and democracy, while European characters might value tradition and social hierarchy—leading to misunderstandings.

💔 Unlived lives and emotional devastation

  • What: Emotional devastation resulting from a life not fully lived.
  • Why it matters: James examined the cost of repression, missed opportunities, and failure to act on one's desires.
  • Example: A character who sacrifices personal happiness for duty might later realize what they have lost.

📖 Notable works

📖 Major novels

James's notable novel-length works include:

  • Daisy Miller (1878)
  • The Portrait of a Lady (1881)
  • The Bostonians (1886)
  • What Maisie Knew (1897)
  • The Turn of the Screw (1898)
  • The Ambassadors (1903)

📖 What these works examine

All of these novels explore the themes mentioned above:

  • The plight of strong-willed or precocious young women or children at odds with conventional society.
  • Tensions from transatlantic travel and American-European cultural clashes.
  • Emotional devastation from unlived lives.

Don't confuse: While the excerpt lists these titles and themes, it does not provide plot details or character names from the novels themselves—those would be external knowledge not present in the excerpt.

7

Henry James and Daisy Miller

2.7 Sarah Orne Jewett

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

Henry James used psychological Realism and experimental narrative techniques to explore cultural clashes and ambiguous character motivations, leaving readers without clear resolutions about whether characters like Daisy Miller are innocent or worldly.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • James's role in American Realism: one of the leading proponents alongside Howells and Twain, but went further in experimenting with point of view, unreliable narrators, and interior monologues.
  • Core themes: strong-willed women or children versus conventional society; American-European cultural clashes during transatlantic travel; emotional devastation from unlived lives.
  • Psychological Realism: James focuses on characters' inner lives and ambiguous motivations rather than external action.
  • Common confusion—innocence vs. worldliness: Daisy Miller centers on whether Daisy is naively ignorant of European social rules or deliberately manipulative; James offers no answer.
  • Characteristic Realist style: no resolution at the story's end; questions about character and future remain unanswered.

📚 James's life and literary context

🌍 Transatlantic background

  • Born into a wealthy family; lived abroad for several years during childhood.
  • Family returned to America before the Civil War, settling in Newport, Rhode Island, and later Cambridge, Massachusetts.
  • Unable to serve in the Union Army due to physical disability; attended Harvard Law School before choosing a life of travel and writing.
  • Relocated to London in 1876; lived most of his adult life in England; received British citizenship in 1915, one year before his death.

✍️ Literary connections and theory

  • Short works came to the attention of William Dean Howells, then assistant editor at The Atlantic Monthly in Boston.
  • James and Howells became proponents and literary theorists for the Realism movement in America.
  • The Art of Fiction (1884) sets forth many of James's ideas about the nature and importance of Realistic fiction.
  • Gregarious and well-connected to leading artists and intellectuals, but never married; preferred to live alone and focus on reading and writing.

📖 Notable works

James's major novels examine recurring themes:

WorkYearTheme
Daisy Miller1878Independent American girl abroad; cultural clashes
The Portrait of a Lady1881Strong-willed woman vs. society
The Bostonians1886Social pressures and conventions
What Maisie Knew1897Precocious child at odds with society
The Turn of the Screw1898Psychological ambiguity
The Ambassadors1903Transatlantic tensions; unlived life

🔬 Psychological Realism and technique

🧠 What makes James a "psychological Realist"

Psychological Realist: a writer who focuses on characters' inner mental and emotional states, motivations, and perceptions rather than purely external events.

  • James went further than Howells and Twain in experimentation with point of view.
  • Employed unreliable narrators and interior monologues to reveal ambiguous character psychology.
  • Example: In Daisy Miller, Winterbourne's obsessive attempts to understand Daisy reveal more about his own inhibitions and psychological paralysis than about Daisy herself.

🎭 Unreliable narration and ambiguity

  • James does not provide clear answers about characters' true natures or motivations.
  • Readers must interpret characters through the lens of other characters' perceptions, which may be flawed.
  • Don't confuse: This is not about withholding plot information; it's about making character motivation and moral judgment fundamentally uncertain.

🌐 Core themes in James's work

👩 Strong-willed women and children vs. convention

  • Recurring focus on "strong-willed or precocious young women or children at odds with the pressures of conventional society."
  • These characters challenge social norms but face consequences or misunderstanding.
  • Example: Daisy Miller's independent behavior clashes with European expectations for young women.

🌊 Transatlantic cultural clashes

  • "Tensions arising from transatlantic travel and living abroad where Americans experience clashes between American and European cultures."
  • Americans abroad encounter different manners, etiquette, and unwritten social rules.
  • James himself lived this tension: American-born, European-educated, eventually a British citizen.
  • Example: In Daisy Miller, Daisy's American directness and informality are misread by those "acclimated to European manners."

💔 Emotional devastation from unlived lives

  • Theme of "emotional devastation resulting from a life not fully lived."
  • Characters paralyzed by social or psychological fears, unable or unwilling to commit fully to another person.
  • Example: Winterbourne's preoccupation with Daisy's innocence may reflect his own inhibitions; he may be "living essentially a half-life."

📖 Daisy Miller: A Study (1878)

🎯 Plot and central question

  • A novella focusing on Daisy Miller, a young independent-minded American girl traveling in Europe with her mother and brother.
  • She meets Frederick Winterbourne, an American living abroad.
  • Central question: Is Daisy "innocent"—a playful, naive girl ignorant of cultural conventions—or is she worldly and manipulative?
  • Winterbourne's obsessive desire to answer this question drives the plot.

🔍 Winterbourne as psychological study

The excerpt emphasizes that Winterbourne himself becomes the real subject:

  • "Is his preoccupation with Daisy's innocence a reflection of his own inhibitions?"
  • "Is he living essentially a half-life, unable or unwilling to commit fully to another person?"
  • "Is he paralyzed in a complex web of social or psychological fears?"
  • Key insight: The story is as much about Winterbourne's psychology as about Daisy's character.

🚫 No resolution

  • "In characteristic Realist style, James offers no resolution at the end of the story."
  • Questions about Daisy's character and Winterbourne's future go unanswered.
  • Don't confuse: This is not a flaw or incomplete draft; it is a deliberate Realist technique to reflect the ambiguity of real life.

🏞️ Opening scene analysis (Part I excerpt)

🏨 Setting: Vevey, Switzerland

  • A Swiss resort town on a "remarkably blue lake."
  • The hotel "Trois Couronnes" is "famous, even classical," distinguished by "luxury and maturity."
  • In June, "American travelers are extremely numerous"; the town "assumes some of the characteristics of an American watering place" (like Newport or Saratoga).
  • Cultural mix: American tourists, German waiters, Russian princesses, Polish boys with governors, views of the Alps and Castle of Chillon.

🧑 Winterbourne's introduction

  • About 27 years old; lives in Geneva, ostensibly "studying."
  • Rumors suggest he is "extremely devoted to a lady who lived there—a foreign lady—a person older than himself."
  • "Very few Americans—indeed, I think none—had ever seen this lady, about whom there were some singular stories."
  • Described as "extremely amiable" and "universally liked."
  • Has an "old attachment" to Geneva; was schooled and went to college there.
  • Implication: Winterbourne is already living a somewhat detached, ambiguous life before meeting Daisy.

👦 Meeting Randolph Miller

  • A small boy, "diminutive for his years," with "an aged expression of countenance."
  • Dressed in knickerbockers and a red cravat; carries an alpenstock (a long walking stick) and pokes it into everything.
  • Speaks in "a sharp, hard little voice—a voice immature and yet, somehow, not young."
  • Complains about losing teeth: "It's this old Europe. It's the climate that makes them come out. In America they didn't come out."
  • Declares: "American candy's the best candy" and "American men are the best."
  • Function: Randolph introduces themes of American identity and cultural comparison; his bluntness contrasts with European social subtlety.

👩 Daisy Miller's entrance

  • Randolph announces: "Here comes my sister! She's an American girl."
  • Daisy is "strikingly, admirably pretty," dressed in white muslin with "a hundred frills and flounces" and "knots of pale-colored ribbon."
  • Bareheaded, carrying a large parasol with embroidered border.
  • Winterbourne thinks: "How pretty they are!" and prepares to rise.

💬 First conversation: manners and ambiguity

  • Winterbourne reflects: "In Geneva, as he had been perfectly aware, a young man was not at liberty to speak to a young unmarried lady except under certain rarely occurring conditions; but here at Vevey, what conditions could be better than these?"
  • Daisy's behavior is puzzling:
    • She "simply glanced at him; she then turned her head and looked over the parapet."
    • "She was evidently neither offended nor flattered."
    • "If she looked another way when he spoke to her, and seemed not particularly to hear him, this was simply her habit, her manner."
  • Her glance is "perfectly direct and unshrinking," "singularly honest and fresh," but "not exactly expressive."
  • Winterbourne mentally accuses her face—"very forgivingly—of a want of finish."
  • Key observation: "He thought it very possible that Master Randolph's sister was a coquette; he was sure she had a spirit of her own; but in her bright, sweet, superficial little visage there was no mockery, no irony."

🗣️ Daisy's conversational style

  • She is "much disposed toward conversation."
  • Tells Winterbourne they are going to Rome for the winter.
  • Asks if he is "a real American"; says he seems "more like a German—especially when he spoke."
  • Shares details freely: she is from New York State; her real name is Annie P. Miller; her father, Ezra B. Miller, is in Schenectady with "a big business" and is "rich."
  • "She talked to Winterbourne as if she had known him a long time."
  • "It was many years since he had heard a young girl talk so much."
  • The excerpt notes: "It might have been said of this unknown young lady, who had come and sat down beside him upon a bench, that she chattered."
  • Ambiguity: Is this openness American informality and innocence, or is it a calculated performance? The text does not say.

🤔 Winterbourne's reaction

  • "He found it very pleasant."
  • He has "a great relish for feminine beauty; he was addicted to observing and analyzing it."
  • He makes "several observations" about Daisy's face but cannot settle on a clear interpretation.
  • Implication: Winterbourne's analytical, detached approach may prevent him from engaging authentically with Daisy.
8

Daisy Miller: Social Class and American Innocence Abroad

2.8 Kate Chopin

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

Henry James's excerpt dramatizes the tension between American informality and European social codes through Winterbourne's encounter with Daisy Miller, whose open, friendly behavior defies the strict class boundaries enforced by expatriate Americans like Mrs. Costello.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • Daisy's characterization: She is presented as charming, talkative, and socially uninhibited—traits that mark her as "common" by European expatriate standards but also as innocent and natural.
  • Mrs. Costello's exclusivity: Winterbourne's aunt represents rigid social hierarchy; she refuses to meet Daisy because of her low social standing and her family's familiarity with their courier.
  • Winterbourne's confusion: He oscillates between seeing Daisy as innocent and wondering if she is a "flirt" or morally lax, revealing his own uncertainty about American versus European social norms.
  • Common confusion: "Common" vs. "uncultivated"—Mrs. Costello uses "common" to mean low social class and lacking proper manners, not simply uneducated; Daisy's behavior (talking freely to men, planning an unchaperoned outing) violates unwritten rules of respectability.
  • The courier issue: Treating the courier Eugenio as a social equal is a key marker of the Millers' ignorance of European class distinctions and a scandal in Mrs. Costello's eyes.

🎭 Daisy Miller's character and behavior

🗣️ Talkative and sociable

Daisy is described as having "a soft, slender, agreeable voice" and a "decidedly sociable" tone; "her lips and her eyes were constantly moving."

  • She talks freely and at length to Winterbourne, a stranger she has just met in a hotel garden.
  • The narrator notes it "might have been said of this unknown young lady… that she chattered," yet she does so "in a charming, tranquil attitude."
  • She recounts her family's travel plans, hotels, and social life in America without reserve.
  • Example: She tells Winterbourne she had "seventeen dinners given me" in New York, "three of them were by gentlemen," and declares "I have always had a great deal of gentlemen's society."
  • Don't confuse: Her talkativeness is not presented as nervous or anxious; she is "very quiet" physically and speaks "without examining" Winterbourne's remarks, suggesting ease rather than calculation.

🌸 Innocent or forward?

  • Winterbourne is "amused, perplexed, and decidedly charmed" but unsure how to interpret her openness.
  • He wonders: "Was she simply a pretty girl from New York State? … Or was she also a designing, an audacious, an unscrupulous young person?"
  • The text emphasizes his confusion: "Miss Daisy Miller looked extremely innocent," yet he has heard conflicting reports—"some people had told him that, after all, American girls were exceedingly innocent; and others had told him that, after all, they were not."
  • He settles on calling her "a pretty American flirt," meaning "very unsophisticated" and not a dangerous "coquette" like the European women he has known.
  • Example: When Daisy proposes going to the Chateau de Chillon with him (without her mother), she does so "very placidly" and does not blush—behavior that would shock a Geneva girl but seems natural to her.

🎀 Appearance and taste

  • Daisy is "extremely pretty" with "pretty hands, ornamented with very brilliant rings" and "pretty eyes."
  • Mrs. Costello grudgingly admits "she dresses in perfection" and wonders "I can't think where they get their taste," implying that good dress should not coexist with low social standing.
  • Daisy herself says she feels European when wearing Paris dresses, showing her association of Europe with fashion and elegance.

🏛️ Mrs. Costello and social exclusivity

👵 Mrs. Costello's character

Mrs. Costello is "a widow with a fortune; a person of much distinction" who is "very exclusive."

  • She has "a long, pale face, a high nose, and a great deal of very striking white hair" worn in elaborate puffs.
  • She suffers from "sick headaches" and uses them as a reason to avoid unwanted social contact.
  • She presents herself as a guardian of New York society's "minutely hierarchical constitution" and tells Winterbourne "one had to be" exclusive in that city.

🚫 Refusal to meet Daisy

  • Mrs. Costello immediately identifies the Millers as "very common" and "the sort of Americans that one does one's duty by not—not accepting."
  • Her reasons:
    • Low social standing: She perceives Daisy's "place in the social scale was low."
    • Intimacy with the courier: "She is a young lady who has an intimacy with her mamma's courier." The Millers treat Eugenio "like a familiar friend—like a gentleman," and Mrs. Costello speculates "Very likely they have never seen a man with such good manners… He probably corresponds to the young lady's idea of a count."
    • Improper behavior: Planning an unchaperoned trip with Winterbourne after knowing him half an hour.
  • When Winterbourne asks if she will meet Daisy, she replies: "I am an old woman, but I am not too old, thank Heaven, to be shocked!"
  • Example: She contrasts Daisy with her own granddaughters in New York, who are "tremendous flirts" but would never go as far as Daisy—"I should like to see my granddaughters do them!"

⚖️ European vs. American standards

AspectMrs. Costello's viewDaisy's behavior
Social hierarchyRigid; one must "accept" or reject people based on classInformal; talks to anyone, treats courier as equal
ChaperoningYoung ladies need supervision; unchaperoned outings are scandalousProposes trip with Winterbourne alone, sees no impropriety
ConversationReserved; one does not discuss personal matters with strangersOpen; freely mentions gentlemen friends and social life
Class markersRecognizing and respecting servants' lower statusUnaware or indifferent to European class distinctions

🤔 Winterbourne's perspective and confusion

🧩 His background

  • Winterbourne has "lived at Geneva so long that he had lost a good deal; he had become dishabituated to the American tone."
  • He has "lost his instinct" for judging American girls and relies on formulas: he is "almost grateful for having found the formula that applied to Miss Daisy Miller" (the "pretty American flirt").
  • He is caught between attraction and doubt: he finds her "very charming" but wonders "how deucedly sociable!" and whether her behavior indicates moral laxity.

🎭 His reaction to Mrs. Costello's refusal

  • Winterbourne is "embarrassed" and tries to soften his aunt's rejection by blaming her headaches.
  • When Daisy realizes the truth ("She doesn't want to know me!"), he is "touched, shocked, mortified."
  • He briefly considers "sacrifice[ing] his aunt, conversationally; to admit that she was a proud, rude woman," but does not follow through.
  • Example: Daisy laughs and says "Gracious! she IS exclusive!" showing she understands the snub but is not deeply hurt—or at least does not show it.

🔍 Judging Daisy

  • Winterbourne tries to reconcile contradictory impressions:
    • She is "completely uncultivated" yet "wonderfully pretty" and "very nice."
    • She speaks freely about male friends, yet "looked extremely innocent."
    • She proposes an unchaperoned outing, yet does so "very placidly" without apparent guile.
  • He asks his aunt: "That she is the sort of young lady who expects a man, sooner or later, to carry her off?" revealing his uncertainty about her intentions.
  • Mrs. Costello warns him: "You have lived too long out of the country. You will be sure to make some great mistake. You are too innocent."

👨‍👩‍👦 The Miller family dynamics

🧒 Randolph and Mrs. Miller

  • Randolph is Daisy's nine-year-old brother, described as "very smart" but difficult: he refuses lessons, won't go to bed, and "wants to talk to the waiter."
  • Mrs. Miller is "a small, spare, light person" with "a wandering eye" and "enormous diamonds in her ears."
  • She is passive and ineffectual: she "couldn't induce" Randolph to go to bed and speaks "very gently" without asserting authority.
  • She offers no response when Daisy announces the trip to Chillon, suggesting either disapproval she cannot voice or indifference.

🎩 Eugenio the courier

  • Eugenio is "a tall, handsome man, with superb whiskers, wearing a velvet morning coat and a brilliant watch chain."
  • He addresses Daisy as "mademoiselle" and speaks in a tone Winterbourne finds "very impertinent," as if implying Daisy "picked up" acquaintances.
  • The Millers' reliance on and familiarity with Eugenio is a key sign of their social ignorance: they do not understand that a courier is a servant, not a social equal.
  • Example: Mrs. Costello says "He sits with them in the garden in the evening. I think he smokes," treating this as scandalous evidence of the family's vulgarity.

🏰 The Chillon excursion as social test

🗓️ The proposal

  • Daisy expresses a strong desire to visit the Chateau de Chillon: "I want to go there dreadfully… I wouldn't go away from here without having seen that old castle."
  • When Winterbourne suggests arranging supervision for Randolph, Daisy says "I wish YOU would stay with him!"—then, when he demurs, she proposes going with him instead.
  • Winterbourne interprets "we" as meaning just the two of them and feels "as if he ought to kiss the young lady's hand," showing he sees the plan as romantically charged.

⚠️ The scandal

  • Mrs. Costello is horrified: going to Chillon with a man Daisy has known "half an hour" is proof she "exceeded the liberal margin allowed" even to American flirts.
  • Winterbourne himself is uncertain whether the trip is innocent or improper, but he is "impatient to see her again."
  • Daisy's mother offers no clear objection, only a vague remark: "I presume you will go in the cars," suggesting passive acceptance or helplessness.

🎭 Daisy's response to rejection

  • When Daisy learns Mrs. Costello won't meet her, she laughs and says "She doesn't want to know me! … Why should she want to know me?"
  • The narrator notes "Winterbourne fancied there was a tremor in her voice," hinting at hurt beneath her casual tone.
  • She repeats "You needn't be afraid" and "Gracious! she IS exclusive!" showing a mix of defiance and self-awareness.
  • Don't confuse: Daisy's laughter and light tone may mask genuine feeling; the text leaves ambiguous whether she is truly indifferent or covering embarrassment.

🌍 Themes: American innocence vs. European sophistication

🇺🇸 The "American" type

  • Daisy embodies a recognizable type for James: the young American woman abroad, characterized by:
    • Naturalness: She behaves as she would at home, without adjusting to European conventions.
    • Openness: She speaks freely and expects others to do the same.
    • Ignorance of class: She does not recognize or respect European social hierarchies.
  • Winterbourne notes he has "never yet heard a young girl express herself in just this fashion" and wonders if "they all" are like this in America.

🇪🇺 European (and expatriate) judgment

  • Mrs. Costello and Winterbourne represent Americans who have adopted European standards and now view their compatriots through that lens.
  • "Common" becomes a key term of judgment: it means not just lower-class origins but a failure to observe the unwritten rules of "good society."
  • The courier issue is emblematic: in Europe, servants are invisible socially; treating them as equals reveals the Millers' lack of sophistication.

⚖️ The ambiguity of "innocence"

  • The excerpt repeatedly raises the question: Is Daisy innocent (unaware of the implications of her behavior) or knowing (deliberately flouting convention)?
  • Winterbourne cannot decide, and the text does not resolve the question.
  • Example: Daisy's proposal to go to Chillon could be read as naïve enthusiasm or as a calculated test of Winterbourne's interest.
  • Key tension: American "innocence" can look like European "impropriety," and the characters struggle to distinguish the two.
9

Mary E. Wilkins Freeman

2.9 Mary E. Wilkins Freeman

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

Mary E. Wilkins Freeman's fiction, like Sarah Orne Jewett's, combines Local Color features with deeper psychological characterization and feminist themes, predicting the complexity found in later Realist writers.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • What defines Freeman's work: exhibits Local Color features (geography, speech, customs) but goes beyond surface detail to focus on dimensional characterization.
  • How her work differs from pure Local Color: plot and action are filtered through the consciousness of a central protagonist (usually a young girl or woman), showing internal conflict.
  • Common confusion—Local Color vs. Regionalism vs. Realism: Freeman's work is difficult to categorize because these literary movements developed in parallel and overlapped; most critics describe her work as American Literary Regionalism.
  • Why her work matters: three-dimensional characters with psychological complexity predict the sophistication of Realist writers like Howells and James; focus on women's lives and limitations represents early feminist realism.

📚 Literary classification challenges

📚 Multiple overlapping labels

The excerpt notes that Freeman "has been described as both a local colorist and a regionalist, and even as an early realist."

  • Why categorization is difficult: these literary movements "developed at times parallel to one another and at other instances overlapped."
  • The excerpt states: "The difficulty in labeling her work points to limits of categorizing literature using terms for distinct literary movements."
  • Most accepted label: "Most literary critics, though, are comfortable describing Jewett's work as representative of American Literary Regionalism"—the same applies to Freeman.

🔍 Don't confuse: Local Color vs. deeper characterization

  • Local Color features present: sense of locale (geography, landscape), speech patterns, customs of inhabitants.
  • But Freeman goes beyond: "beyond the particulars of place, these stories focus on characterization, particularly in ways that plot or action in the story is filtered through the consciousness of a central protagonist."
  • Example: not just showing what people do in a region, but how a character internally experiences and decides.

🎭 Character development approach

🎭 Three-dimensional protagonists

Freeman's work shows "evidence of three dimensional characters who must work through an internal conflict."

  • Who the protagonists are: "most often a young girl or a woman."
  • What makes them three-dimensional: they have internal conflicts, not just external obstacles.
  • How this predicts Realism: "this dimensional characterization predicts the kind of psychological complexity of character that becomes even more refined and sophisticated in works by Realistic writers such as Howells and James."

🧠 Consciousness as narrative filter

  • The excerpt emphasizes that "plot or action in the story is filtered through the consciousness of a central protagonist."
  • This means: the story is not just events happening to a character, but events experienced and interpreted by the character's mind.
  • Example from Jewett's A White Heron (used to illustrate the same technique): "Sylvy's internal conflict—whether or not to give away the location of the heron's nest to the handsome male stranger—forms the basis of the plot of the story."

🌱 Feminist dimensions

🌱 Early feminist realism

The excerpt states Freeman's work "predicts an early feminist realism" through "its focus on the lives of women and the limitations placed on them by the cultural and historical moment."

  • What this means: the stories examine how women's choices and identities are constrained by their society and time period.
  • How it appears in the work: characters must navigate cultural expectations while discovering or asserting their own sense of self.

🔑 Larger questions of identity

Using Jewett's A White Heron as an example of the same approach:

  • Sylvy's choice is not just about the bird vs. the man.
  • "She must determine who she is and whether she can be loyal to this new sense of self."
  • The excerpt asks: "Is Sylvy saving only the heron when she keeps the heron's location secret?"
  • This illustrates how Freeman and Jewett explore women's self-definition against external pressures.

🔗 Relationship to other writers

🔗 Comparison with Sarah Orne Jewett

The excerpt repeatedly pairs Freeman with Jewett:

AspectShared features
RegionBoth are New England writers
Local ColorBoth show "important sense of locale in terms of geography and landscape, as well as the speech patterns and customs of the inhabitants"
CharacterizationBoth focus on "three dimensional characters who must work through an internal conflict"
ProtagonistsBoth center on "a young girl or a woman"
Feminist themesBoth examine "the lives of women and the limitations placed on them by the cultural and historical moment"

📈 Influence on later Realism

  • Freeman's psychological complexity "predicts the kind of psychological complexity of character that becomes even more refined and sophisticated in works by Realistic writers such as Howells and James."
  • This means: Freeman is a transitional figure, moving from Local Color toward the fuller psychological Realism of later writers.
  • Don't confuse: Freeman is not as sophisticated as Howells and James, but her work points toward their techniques.
10

Kate Chopin (1850–1904)

2.10 Charles Waddell Chesnutt

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

Kate Chopin evolved from a successful Local Color writer to a groundbreaking feminist author whose frank depiction of female sexuality in The Awakening shocked Victorian audiences but later earned recognition as an important early feminist work.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • Life trajectory: Born into affluence, widowed young with debt, turned to writing to cope with grief and financial need; her Louisiana experiences provided rich material.
  • Two-phase career: First phase—successful Local Color stories (e.g., Bayou Folk, 1894); second phase—The Awakening (1899), which shocked readers and ended her public career.
  • Core theme in The Awakening: Rigid cultural and legal boundaries that prevented women from living authentic, self-directed lives; the novel portrays a woman awakening to her own sexuality and desire for authenticity.
  • "The Storm" (1898): An unpublished-until-1969 story offering an erotic, non-judgmental depiction of extramarital sex—unpublishable in the late 19th century.
  • Common confusion: Chopin was known as a Local Color writer in her lifetime, but her later work transcended that label by addressing universal feminist themes; the revival in the 1960s reframed her legacy.

📚 Life and career arc

🏠 Early life and Louisiana years

  • Born Katherine O'Flaherty in 1850 in St. Louis, Missouri, to an affluent family.
  • Educated in a Catholic girls' school.
  • Married Oscar Chopin at age twenty; moved to New Orleans, then to Cloutierville (a Creole community area) in 1879.
  • Raised six children with Oscar until his unexpected death in 1882, which left her in serious debt.

💔 Loss and the turn to writing

  • After Oscar's death, Chopin worked and sold the family business to pay off debt.
  • Moved back to St. Louis to be near her mother, who died soon after.
  • Turned to reading and writing to deal with grief.
  • Her New Orleans and Cloutierville experiences became rich writing material.

✍️ First success: Local Color stories

  • During the 1890s, enjoyed success publishing stories in the Local Color tradition.
  • Many stories collected in Bayou Folk (1894).
  • Known primarily as a Local Color writer in her lifetime.

🌊 The Awakening and its aftermath

📖 The novel's themes

The Awakening (1899): a novel examining the rigid cultural and legal boundaries placed on women which limited or prevented them from living authentic, fully self-directed lives.

  • Offers a "sensuous portrait" of Edna Pontellier, a young married woman and mother.
  • Edna awakens to herself as a "dimensional human being with sexual longings and a strong will to live an authentic life."
  • Contrasts authentic life with the "repressed half-life" assigned by tradition and culture through marriage and motherhood institutions—roles women were expected to "perform."

💥 Shocking the Victorian audience

  • The frank depiction of a woman's sexuality shocked and offended turn-of-the-century readers.
  • Chopin was unprepared for the negative critical reception.
  • She retreated from the publishing world after the backlash.

🔄 Revival and reframing

  • The novel was "all but forgotten" until the 1960s.
  • During the 1960s revival, interest in Chopin's work was renewed.
  • Today The Awakening is viewed as an important early feminist work.
  • Don't confuse: the novel's reputation shifted dramatically—from scandalous to celebrated—once cultural attitudes toward women's autonomy changed.

🌪️ "The Storm" and the linked stories

📝 Discovery and publication history

  • "The Storm" was written in 1898 but not published until 1969.
  • Discovered during the 1960s revival of interest in Chopin's work.
  • The story's erotic depiction of extramarital sex would have been "unpublishable by most, if not all, major literary magazines in late nineteenth-century America."

🔗 Connection to "At the 'Cadian Ball"

  • "The Storm" was intended as a sequel to "At the 'Cadian Ball" (first published 1892, reprinted in Bayou Folk).
  • The linked stories concern two couples from different social classes:
    • Alcée and Clarisse: upper-class Creoles
    • Calixta and Bobinôt: less prominent Acadians (Cajuns)
StoryRelationship statusWhat happens
"At the 'Cadian Ball"Both couples single; strong flirtation between Calixta and AlcéeSocial-class differences complicate attraction
"The Storm"Years later; both couples married to their respective partnersCalixta and Alcée have a passionate afternoon encounter

🌈 The non-judgmental ending

  • Beyond the "candid, natural depiction of sexual intimacy," including scenes of a woman "clearly enjoying an afternoon of passion," the story offers a non-judgmental ending.
  • After the storm passes, Alcée and Calixta go their separate ways.
  • The reader is told "everyone…is quite happy."
  • No one appears to be hurt by the affair.
  • Example: This ending was radical for its time—it refused to punish the characters for transgressing moral norms, instead presenting their happiness as legitimate.

🕰️ Death and legacy

💔 Final years

  • Died unexpectedly in 1904 from a brain hemorrhage, a few years after retreating from publishing.
  • She was seventy-eight years old (note: this conflicts with birth year 1850 and death year 1904; the excerpt states she died "a few years later" after 1899, which aligns with 1904, making her fifty-four, not seventy-eight—this is an inconsistency in the source).

🏆 Reassessment

  • In her lifetime: known primarily as a Local Color writer who produced important short stories.
  • After 1960s revival: recognized for groundbreaking feminist themes, especially in The Awakening.
  • Her work is now understood as transcending regional boundaries to address universal questions about women's autonomy, sexuality, and authenticity.
11

Charlotte Perkins Gilman

2.11 Charlotte Perkins Gilman

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

Mary E. Wilkins Freeman's short fiction, particularly "A New England Nun" and "The Revolt of Mother," represents an early feminist realism that explores women's courageous redefinition of their roles within—and sometimes against—the domestic sphere and cultural expectations of late nineteenth-century New England.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • Freeman's literary identity: Though labeled a local colorist, Freeman is better understood as an American Literary Regionalist who develops dimensional characters with explored internal conflicts, moving beyond mere regional description.
  • Core thematic focus: Her stories center on women redefining their place in the domestic sphere—either by rejecting traditional roles entirely (Louisa in "A New England Nun") or by asserting the value of domestic work within traditional roles (Sarah in "The Revolt of Mother").
  • Louisa's rebellion: In "A New England Nun," Louisa courageously chooses solitude, self-determination, and control over her domestic world over marriage, valuing peace and autonomy above cultural pressure to become a wife and mother.
  • Sarah's revolt: In "The Revolt of Mother," Sarah accepts her traditional role but refuses her husband's dismissive attitude, enacting a military-like revolt to assert that her domestic work is as important as his farming labor.
  • Common confusion: Freeman is often grouped with local colorists like Sarah Orne Jewett, but both authors transcend simple regional concerns to explore broader issues of women's roles, approaching early feminist realism rather than just documenting regional customs.

📚 Freeman's literary context and achievement

📖 Biography and career

  • Born 1852 in Randolph, Massachusetts; attended Mount Holyoke Female Seminary and West Brattleboro Seminary while pursuing writing.
  • By mid-thirties, parents had died; she lived with family friends, supporting herself through writing.
  • Gained recognition from major writers including William Dean Howells and Henry James.
  • Best known for short stories focusing on New England region, though she wrote novels, mysteries, and ghost stories.
  • Married Dr. Charles Freeman at forty-nine; marriage troubled by his alcoholism; eventually separated; he was committed to mental hospital.
  • Died 1930 at seventy-eight after heart attack.

🏆 Major works

Two critically acclaimed short story collections:

  • A Humble Romance and Other Stories (1887)
  • A New England Nun and Other Stories (1891) — her most critically acclaimed achievement

Both collections concern rural New England life and focus particularly on women's domestic concerns.

🎭 Literary classification: beyond local color

American Literary Regionalism: A literary approach that develops dimensional characters whose internal conflicts are explored, going beyond surface-level regional description.

Why Freeman transcends "local colorist" label:

  • She and Jewett develop characters with psychological depth and internal conflicts.
  • Stories explore wider issues of women's roles in late nineteenth-century America.
  • Work approaches early feminist realism by examining women's agency and choices.
  • Regional setting serves as backdrop for universal themes about autonomy and self-determination.

Don't confuse: Local color (picturesque regional details and customs) vs. Literary Regionalism (using regional settings to explore dimensional characters and universal human conflicts).

🏠 "A New England Nun": Louisa's domain

👰 Louisa Ellis's character and world

Louisa's defining traits:

  • Meticulous, orderly, ritualistic in her domestic routines.
  • Uses china daily (unlike neighbors who save it for special occasions).
  • Every object has its precise place; she has never mislaid "one of these little feminine appurtenances."
  • Moves slowly and deliberately; takes pleasure in simple domestic tasks like sewing linen seams "for the mere delight of sewing it together again."

Her domestic sanctuary:

  • Small, delicate, orderly home where everything is arranged with "as much grace as if she had been a veritable guest to her own self."
  • Polished windowpanes "shone like jewels"; bureau drawers "exquisitely folded" and "redolent with lavender and sweet clover."
  • She has "the enthusiasm of an artist over the mere order and cleanliness of her solitary home."

Example: When Joe visits, she wears multiple aprons layered—pink and white over white linen company apron over green gingham—each removed methodically as the visit progresses. After he leaves, she carefully sweeps up the dust he tracked in.

🐕 Caesar the dog: symbol of constraint

Caesar's story:

  • Large yellow-and-white dog who bit a neighbor in his youth.
  • Has lived chained in a small hut for fourteen years as punishment.
  • Fed only "ascetic fare of corn-mush and cakes" to avoid inflaming his "dangerous temper."
  • Village children fear him as "a very monster of ferocity," though Joe recognizes him as harmless.

Symbolic meaning:

  • Represents Louisa's own constrained but peaceful existence.
  • Her fear of Joe releasing Caesar parallels her fear of losing control over her ordered life.
  • Caesar "chained, his reputation overshadowed him, so that he lost his own proper outlines"—just as Louisa's true self might be overshadowed by marriage.

💍 The fourteen-year engagement

The courtship's unusual history:

  • Engaged fifteen years ago; Joe went to Australia to make his fortune.
  • For fourteen of those years, they never saw each other and "seldom exchanged letters."
  • Joe stayed loyal, determined to marry Louisa no matter how long it took.
  • Louisa waited "patiently and unquestioningly."

What changed during the separation:

"Greatest happening of all—a subtle happening which both were too simple to understand—Louisa's feet had turned into a path, smooth maybe under a calm, serene sky, but so straight and unswerving that it could only meet a check at her grave, and so narrow that there was no room for any one at her side."

  • Louisa had "fallen into a way of placing it so far in the future that it was almost equal to placing it over the boundaries of another life."
  • When Joe returned, "she was as much surprised and taken aback as if she had never thought of it."
  • Her first emotion was "consternation, although she would not admit it to herself."

Don't confuse: Louisa's loyalty (she never considered marrying anyone else) with desire for marriage (the path of her life had become too narrow to accommodate another person).

🌙 The overheard conversation

What Louisa learns:

  • While sitting on a stone wall one evening, she overhears Joe and Lily Dyer talking.
  • Joe and Lily have feelings for each other but Joe refuses to break his engagement: "I ain't going back on a woman that's waited for me fourteen years, an' break her heart."
  • Lily declares she would never respect a man who broke his word: "Honor's honor, an' right's right."
  • Lily vows never to marry anyone else: "I'll never marry any other man as long as I live."

The diplomatic resolution:

  • Louisa "found" diplomacy "among her little feminine weapons."
  • She carefully sounds out Joe without revealing what she overheard.
  • She tells him "she had lived so long in one way that she shrank from making a change."
  • Joe admits: "I think maybe it's better this way; but if you'd wanted to keep on, I'd have stuck to you till my dying day."
  • They part tenderly, with mutual respect.

👑 Louisa's choice and its meaning

What Louisa gains:

  • "She felt like a queen who, after fearing lest her domain be wrested away from her, sees it firmly insured in her possession."
  • Caesar will never "go on a rampage through the unguarded village."
  • She can continue to "sew linen seams, and distil roses, and dust and polish and fold away in lavender, as long as she listed."
  • "Serenity and placid narrowness had become to her as the birthright itself."

What she rejects:

  • Marriage to Joe would mean leaving her home for his larger house.
  • She would have to care for Joe's "rigorous and feeble old mother."
  • Her pleasant solitary activities (distilling essences, sewing for pleasure) would be seen as "foolishness."
  • Joe's "honest masculine rudeness" and his mother would "laugh and frown down all these pretty but senseless old maiden ways."
  • She had "visions, so startling that she half repudiated them as indelicate, of coarse masculine belongings strewn about in endless litter."

The story's final image:

"Louisa sat, prayerfully numbering her days, like an uncloistered nun."

  • She gazes at "a long reach of future days strung together like pearls in a rosary, every one like the others, and all smooth and flawless and innocent."
  • Outside is "the fervid summer afternoon" with "sounds of the busy harvest," but Louisa sits in peace.

The cultural rebellion:

  • Louisa "courageously" forgoes "the role of wife and mother that her culture pressures her to accept."
  • The peace, solitude, and self-determination she claims "are worth the price of her rebellion against cultural norms."
  • She preserves "dominion over her small home" rather than having "her domestic world invaded or controlled by a male presence."

Biblical allusion:

  • "If Louisa Ellis had sold her birthright she did not know it, the taste of the pottage was so delicious."
  • References Esau selling his birthright for pottage (stew) in Genesis.
  • Ironic: society would say Louisa "sold" her birthright (marriage/motherhood) for mere domestic comfort, but to her, the "pottage" (her autonomous life) is the true birthright.

🏚️ "The Revolt of Mother": Sarah's assertion

👩‍🌾 Sarah Penn's situation

The opening conflict:

  • Sarah asks her husband (Father/Adoniram) what men are digging for in the field.
  • He reluctantly reveals: a cellar for a new barn.
  • This is the same field where they were supposed to build a new house.

Sarah's character:

"She was a small woman, short and straight-waisted like a child in her brown cotton gown. Her forehead was mild and benevolent between the smooth curves of gray hair; there were meek downward lines about her nose and mouth; but her eyes, fixed upon the old man, looked as if the meekness had been the result of her own will, never of the will of another."

  • Appears meek and mild, but her meekness is self-determined, not submissive.
  • "Looked as immovable to him as one of the rocks in his pasture-land, bound to the earth with generations of blackberry vines."

The inadequate house:

  • Standing "at right angles with the great barn and a long reach of sheds and out-buildings."
  • "Was infinitesimal compared with them."
  • "Scarcely as commodious for people as the little boxes under the barn eaves were for doves."

⚔️ The nature of Sarah's revolt

How Freeman describes it:

  • Sarah "enacts a revolt where she, through action likened to a military general storming a fortress."
  • She makes "the statement that her work on the family farm within the domestic sphere is just as important as her husband's work as a farmer."

Key distinction:

  • Unlike Louisa, Sarah "has accepted the traditional role of wife and mother for herself."
  • She does not reject domesticity; she demands respect for it.
  • She refuses "to accept her husband's dismissive attitude when she argues that the farming family needs a new house."

Don't confuse: Rejecting traditional roles (Louisa) vs. asserting the value and importance of traditional domestic work (Sarah). Both are forms of rebellion, but with different goals.

🎯 Thematic significance

🔄 Two models of women's agency

CharacterRelationship to domestic roleForm of rebellionWhat she claims
Louisa EllisRejects marriage and motherhood entirelyChooses solitude over cultural expectationsAutonomy, self-determination, control over her own space
Sarah PennAccepts traditional wife/mother roleDemands respect for domestic work's importanceRecognition that domestic labor equals farm labor in value

🌟 Early feminist realism

What makes Freeman's work "early feminist realism":

  • Characters are women making conscious choices about their lives.
  • Stories explore women's agency within restrictive cultural contexts.
  • Both protagonists "revolt against established cultural expectations for women."
  • Freeman examines the psychological costs and rewards of women's choices.
  • Work moves beyond regional description to engage with gender roles and power dynamics.

The realism element:

  • Detailed, psychologically complex characters.
  • Exploration of internal conflicts and motivations.
  • Honest portrayal of social constraints and personal desires.
  • No idealized or melodramatic resolutions—just quiet, determined choices.

🏡 The domestic sphere as contested territory

Freeman's central insight:

  • The home is not a neutral space but a site of power and control.
  • Women's relationship to domesticity can take multiple forms: rejection, acceptance with conditions, or assertion of its value.
  • "Dominion" over domestic space represents self-determination and autonomy.
  • Male presence threatens to transform the domestic sphere from a woman's domain into a space of "disorder and confusion."

Example: Louisa's fear of "coarse masculine belongings strewn about in endless litter" vs. her current "exquisitely folded contents redolent with lavender"—the same physical space would have entirely different meaning and order depending on who controls it.

12

Frank Norris

3.3 Frank Norris

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

Sarah Penn's quiet rebellion—moving her family into the new barn her husband built for livestock instead of the house he promised forty years ago—demonstrates how a seemingly meek woman can assert moral authority and claim what is rightfully hers when pushed to the limit.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • The central conflict: Adoniram builds a new barn for cows while his family lives in a cramped, inadequate house, despite promising Sarah a new home forty years earlier.
  • Sarah's character: She appears meek and dutiful on the surface but possesses quiet strength and moral conviction that finally erupts into decisive action.
  • The act of rebellion: While Adoniram is away, Sarah moves the entire household into the new barn, transforming livestock quarters into human living space.
  • Common confusion: Sarah is not simply complaining or nagging—she has endured silently for forty years and only acts when an "unsolicited opportunity" (her husband's absence) aligns with her sense of divine providence and justice.
  • Gender and power dynamics: The story contrasts men's unquestioned authority over resources with women's constrained agency, showing how Sarah navigates and ultimately subverts this imbalance.

🏠 The domestic injustice

🏚️ The inadequate house

  • The Penn family has lived for forty years in a house with:
    • One main room serving as kitchen, dining room, and sitting room—no carpet, peeling wallpaper unchanged for ten years.
    • A tiny bedroom "only large enough for a bed and bureau, with a path between" where all the children were born and Sarah endured illness.
    • A small, poorly lit pantry for storing dishes and milk pans from six cows.
    • Two unfinished upstairs chambers for the children, described as "not so good as your horse's stall; not so warm and tight."
  • Sarah's daughter Nanny is engaged to be married but has no proper parlor to receive her fiancé or hold a wedding.
  • Don't confuse: This is not about luxury—Sarah contrasts her situation with other women in town "whose husband ain't got half the means you have but what's got better."

🐄 The broken promise

  • Forty years ago, when they married, Adoniram promised Sarah a new house would be built "in that lot over in the field before the year was out."
  • Instead, Adoniram has built "sheds an' cow-houses an' one new barn" and is now constructing another.
  • Sarah's accusation: "You're lodgin' your dumb beasts better than you are your own flesh an' blood."
  • Example: Adoniram plans to buy four more cows and house them in the new barn while his family remains in squalor.

👩‍👧‍👦 Sarah Penn's character

🕊️ Outward meekness, inner strength

"Sarah Penn's face as she rolled her pies had that expression of meek vigor which might have characterized one of the New Testament saints."

  • Sarah performs her domestic duties with "sedulous attention" to her husband's wants, even while resenting his choices.
  • The excerpt notes: "However deep a resentment she might be forced to hold against her husband, she would never fail in sedulous attention to his wants."
  • She is described as a "masterly keeper of her box of a house"—so skilled that "she was like an artist so perfect that he has apparently no art."
  • Why this matters: Her competence and self-discipline are not signs of weakness but the foundation of her moral authority.

🗣️ The confrontation

  • Sarah finally speaks "real plain" to Adoniram, something she says she has "never have sence I married you."
  • She catalogs every inadequacy of the house, room by room, comparing it to the barn.
  • Her rhetoric: "She had pleaded her little cause like a Webster; she had ranged from severity to pathos."
  • Adoniram's response: Complete silence—"that obstinate silence which makes eloquence futile with mocking echoes." He refuses to engage: "I ain't got nothin' to say."
  • Don't confuse: Sarah is not hysterical or irrational; the text emphasizes her calm, methodical presentation of facts and her appeal to fairness and his professed values.

⚖️ Moral and religious framing

  • Sarah frames her action as a matter of conscience: "I've made it the subject of prayer, an' it's betwixt me an' the Lord an' Adoniram."
  • She tells the minister: "I think it's right jest as much as I think it was right for our forefathers to come over from the old country 'cause they didn't have what belonged to 'em."
  • The excerpt compares her to the Pilgrim Fathers and notes "The barn threshold might have been Plymouth Rock from her bearing."
  • Why this matters: Sarah claims the same moral high ground men use to justify their own decisions, turning religious and patriotic rhetoric to her own purpose.

🚜 The act of rebellion

🕰️ Seizing the opportunity

  • Adoniram receives a letter from Sarah's brother Hiram about a horse for sale and decides to leave for Vermont for "three or four days."
  • Sarah interprets this as providence: "Unsolicited opportunities are the guide-posts of the Lord to the new roads of life."
  • She reflects: "S'posin' I had wrote to Hiram... But I didn't, an' father's goin' wa'n't none of my doin'. It looks like a providence."
  • Don't confuse: Sarah did not engineer her husband's absence; she sees it as a sign that her planned action is morally justified.

📦 Moving into the barn

  • While Adoniram is away, Sarah directs the family to move all household goods into the new barn.
  • The excerpt compares this to a military feat: "It took no more genius and audacity of bravery for Wolfe to cheer his wondering soldiers up those steep precipices... than for Sarah Penn, at the head of her children, to move all their little household goods into the new barn."
  • Sarah immediately sees the barn's potential:
    • Box-stalls become bedrooms (better than the old bedroom).
    • The harness-room with its chimney becomes "a kitchen of her dreams."
    • The great middle space will become a parlor "fit for a palace."
    • She plans to use the space allotted for cows as a front entry.
  • By evening, "the stove was up in the harness-room, the kettle was boiling, and the table set for tea."

🗣️ Community reaction

  • The hired man spreads the news, and "Men assembled in the store and talked it over, women with shawls over their heads scuttled into each other's houses."
  • Divided opinion: "Some held her to be insane; some, of a lawless and rebellious spirit."
  • The minister visits to counsel her, but Sarah firmly rebuffs him: "There ain't no call for nobody else to worry about it."
  • The excerpt notes the minister "could expound the intricacies of every character study in the Scriptures... but Sarah Penn was beyond him. He could deal with primal cases, but parallel ones worsted him."
  • Why this matters: Sarah's action is so unprecedented that even the moral authority of the community cannot categorize or control it.

👨‍🌾 Adoniram and male authority

🤐 Silence as power

  • Adoniram's primary response to Sarah's complaints is refusal to speak: "I ain't got nothin' to say" (repeated multiple times).
  • The excerpt describes his face as "quite stolid, but he looked at her with restive eyes."
  • Why this works: By refusing to justify or explain, Adoniram avoids accountability and maintains control—there is no argument to win if he won't engage.

🚫 Unquestioned decisions

  • Adoniram makes all major decisions (building the barn, buying cows, traveling for a horse) without consulting Sarah.
  • Sarah's mother tells Nanny: "We know only what men-folks think we do, so far as any use of it goes, an' how we'd ought to reckon men-folks in with Providence, an' not complain of what they do any more than we do of the weather."
  • The implication: Men's authority is treated as a natural, unchangeable force like the weather.

🤷 The unresolved ending

  • The story ends with Adoniram discovering his family in the barn: "What on airth you all down here for? What's the matter over to the house?"
  • Sarah's response: "We've come—" (the text cuts off here).
  • Don't confuse: The excerpt does not show Adoniram's final reaction or whether he accepts the situation; the focus is on Sarah's bold act, not its resolution.

🎭 Realist literary techniques

🗨️ Dialect and authenticity

  • The characters speak in rural New England dialect: "ain't," "s'pose," "jest," "wa'n't," "nohow."
  • Example: "I dun' know but what I'd better go" (Adoniram); "You ain't found out yet we're women-folks, Nanny Penn" (Sarah's mother).
  • Why this matters: The dialect grounds the story in a specific time, place, and social class, emphasizing the realism of the setting.

🏡 Detailed domestic description

  • The excerpt meticulously describes the house's inadequacies: the size of rooms, the condition of wallpaper, the layout of the pantry and stairs.
  • Sarah's work is shown in concrete detail: rolling pies, cutting shirt patterns, packing dishes into a clothes-basket.
  • Realist principle: The accumulation of mundane, specific details creates a sense of lived reality rather than romantic idealization.

⚖️ Moral ambiguity and social critique

  • The story does not present Sarah as a flawless heroine or Adoniram as a villain; both are products of their social roles.
  • The community's mixed reaction (insane vs. rebellious) reflects real social tensions about women's proper behavior.
  • Don't confuse: Realism does not mean neutrality—the excerpt clearly sympathizes with Sarah's plight—but it avoids melodrama and shows the complexity of the situation.
13

Stephen Crane

3.4 Stephen Crane

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

The excerpt provided contains no content about Stephen Crane; instead, it presents the conclusion of Mary E. Wilkins Freeman's "Revolt of Mother" and the beginning of Charles Waddell Chesnutt's biography and story "The Passing of Grandison."

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • The excerpt does not contain material related to Stephen Crane (section 3.4).
  • Freeman's story concludes with Adoniram's emotional surrender and acceptance of Sarah's "revolt."
  • Chesnutt's biography introduces him as one of the first successful African-American Realist writers who subverted plantation fiction conventions.
  • "The Passing of Grandison" explores themes of "passing," deception, and the intelligence of enslaved people who wear masks of submission.
  • The story setup involves Dick Owens attempting a heroic act (helping a slave escape) to win Charity Lomax's love.

📖 Content mismatch notice

📖 What the excerpt contains

The source material labeled "3.4 Stephen Crane" does not actually discuss Stephen Crane. Instead, it includes:

  • Pages 177–179: The final scene of Freeman's "Revolt of Mother" plus reading questions about Freeman's stories
  • Pages 179–184: Charles Waddell Chesnutt's biography and the opening of "The Passing of Grandison"

📖 Why this matters for review

  • If you are studying Stephen Crane, this excerpt will not help; you need different source material.
  • The content is valuable for understanding Freeman's and Chesnutt's contributions to American Literary Realism, but it is mislabeled.

🏠 Freeman's "Revolt of Mother" conclusion

🏠 Adoniram's surrender

The story ends with Sarah Penn's complete victory:

  • Adoniram returns to find his family has moved into the new barn he built for livestock.
  • Sarah calmly explains: "We've come here to live, an' we're goin' to live here. We've got jest as good a right here as new horses an' cows."
  • She frames her action within duty: "I've done my duty by you forty year, an' I'm goin' to do it now."

😢 Emotional breakdown and conversion

Adoniram's response shows total capitulation:

  • He weeps on the barn step.
  • He promises: "I'll—put up the—partitions, an'—everything you—want, mother."
  • The narrator describes him as "a fortress whose walls had no active resistance, and went down the instant the right besieging tools were used."

Don't confuse: This is not mutual compromise—Sarah wins completely; Adoniram had "no idee you was so set on't as all this comes to."

📝 Reading questions themes

The excerpt includes study questions focusing on:

  • Confinement imagery (bird, dog) in "A New England Nun"
  • Character comparison (Louisa Ellis vs. Lily Dyer)
  • The meaning of "revolt" and "order" in Freeman's work
  • Adoniram's "conversion" experience

👤 Charles Waddell Chesnutt biography

👤 Life and identity

Key biographical facts from the excerpt:

AspectDetails
Birth1858, Cleveland, Ohio; parents were free African-Americans
Racial identityMixed-race; could have passed as white but chose to identify as African-American
Education/careerTeacher, principal, then lawyer (passed bar 1887); opened court reporting firm
FamilyMarried with four children; returned to Cleveland
ActivismServed on NAACP General Committee (organization formed 1909)

✍️ Literary career

  • Could not support his family by writing alone, but continued publishing through the turn of the century.
  • Gained attention from William Dean Howells, Mark Twain, and other Realist writers.
  • Published stories in prominent literary magazines starting in 1887.

📚 Major works and themes

The excerpt highlights two story collections:

The Conjure Woman (1899)

  • Stories about folk culture and voodoo in slave and freed African-American communities
  • Example: "The Goophered Grapevine" (1887)
  • Borrowed plantation tradition of Local Color fiction

The Wife of His Youth and Other Stories (1899)

  • Explored "passing" (light-skinned African-Americans passing as white)
  • Example: "The Passing of Grandison"

🎭 Literary strategy: subversion

Chesnutt "cleverly borrows the plantation tradition popular in Local Color fiction as a form which he then subverts by depicting African-American characters with innate humanity, intelligence, shrewdness, and an ability to outwit those in power."

  • He used popular forms (plantation stories) but reversed their typical messages.
  • His characters are "dimensional, complex, determined, and daring" rather than stereotypes.

🎭 "The Passing of Grandison" setup

🎭 The term "passing" in context

The excerpt explains Chesnutt uses "passing" in a broader sense:

  • Narrow meaning: Light-skinned African-Americans passing as white.
  • Broader meaning in this story: Grandison wears "the mask of submission as a slave" to trick Colonel Owens.
  • Grandison appears to be a "humble, untutored slave" with "apparent dedication" to his master.
  • This appearance is "quite possibly an act"—a performance to hide his true plans.

Don't confuse: Passing here is not about racial appearance but about behavioral deception—pretending to accept slavery while planning escape.

💕 Dick Owens's motivation

The story opens with a romantic challenge:

  • Dick Owens is wealthy, lazy, and "heir presumptive to a large estate."
  • Charity Lomax refuses to love him until he does "something heroic."
  • She admires a young white man who tried to help a slave escape (was convicted and died in prison).
  • Dick proposes: "Will you love me if I run a negro off to Canada?"

🧠 Dick's plan

Dick decides to take the easy route:

  • He will run off one of his father's slaves, not steal someone else's.
  • He first considers Tom, his personal attendant, who clearly wants to go North but is "prudent enough...to dissemble his feelings."
  • Colonel Owens refuses to let Tom go: "He's a good enough boy, but too smart to trust among those low-down abolitionists."

🎯 Grandison as the chosen servant

Colonel Owens suggests Grandison instead:

  • "He's too fond of good eating, to risk losing his regular meals."
  • "He's sweet on your mother's maid, Betty."
  • The Colonel believes Grandison is safe because of creature comforts and romance.

🎭 Grandison's performance

When questioned, Grandison gives all the "right" answers:

  • "Yas, marster" repeated throughout.
  • Claims he is "better off, suh, dan dem low-down free niggers."
  • Performs the role of the contented, loyal slave perfectly.

Key insight from the excerpt: The ending will reveal "Grandison is, in fact, a much more dimensional, complex, determined, and daring person than the Colonel can see or even imagine." His submissive performance is strategic deception.

🔍 Realism and subversion

🔍 Chesnutt's place in Realism

The excerpt positions Chesnutt as:

  • "One of the first successful African-American writers producing fiction during the period of American Literary Realism."
  • Someone who "capitalized on the popularity of Local Color fiction after the Civil War."

🔍 How subversion works

Chesnutt's method (according to the excerpt):

  1. Borrow the popular plantation tradition form.
  2. Depict African-American characters with full humanity, intelligence, and agency.
  3. Show enslaved people outwitting those in power.
  4. Reveal that white characters' assumptions (like Colonel Owens's confidence in Grandison) are dangerously wrong.

Example from "The Passing of Grandison": The Colonel's long speech about understanding slaves "perfectly" and his confidence that Grandison is too comfortable to run away sets up the story's ironic reversal.

🔍 Contrast with typical plantation fiction

Typical plantation fictionChesnutt's subversion
Slaves depicted as simple, contentCharacters are intelligent, strategic
Masters understand their slavesMasters are blind to slaves' true thoughts
Loyalty is genuineLoyalty is often performance/mask
Hierarchy is natural and stableHierarchy is challenged and undermined
14

3.5 Jack London

3.5 Jack London

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

This excerpt dramatizes how an enslaved man named Grandison repeatedly resists abolitionist efforts and clings to his master despite his owner's son deliberately creating opportunities for escape, revealing the complex dynamics of loyalty, surveillance, and agency under slavery.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • The setup: Dick Owens wants to free Grandison to impress his fiancée Charity, but must do so without appearing complicit; his father the colonel believes Grandison is "abolition-proof."
  • Grandison's professed loyalty: Grandison repeatedly expresses gratitude for his enslavement and disdain for free Black people, claiming he is better off than them.
  • Dick's strategy: Dick takes Grandison to New York and Boston, gives him freedom of movement, writes anonymous letters to abolitionists, and hopes exposure to free Black communities and abolitionists will prompt Grandison to escape.
  • The paradox: Despite multiple encounters with abolitionists and free Black people, Grandison remains with Dick, complains about abolitionist "pestering," and asks to go home.
  • Common confusion: The excerpt does not reveal whether Grandison's loyalty is genuine fear/conditioning or strategic performance—his true motives remain ambiguous at this point in the narrative.

🎭 The colonel's world and Grandison's role

🏛️ The colonel's view of slavery

  • The colonel sees his enslaved people as "the outward and visible sign of his wealth and station, and therefore sacred to him."
  • He frames the master-slave relationship as "blissful"—"kindly protection on the one hand, of wise subordination and loyal dependence on the other."
  • He becomes "indignant at the mere thought" of those who would "break up this blissful relationship."
  • His "feudal heart thrilled" at Grandison's expressions of gratitude.

The colonel's ideology: slavery is a mutually beneficial arrangement where masters provide care and enslaved people provide loyal service.

🗣️ Grandison's professed loyalty

Grandison tells the colonel:

  • He is "better off" than "dem low-down free niggers" who have "no kind master to look after them."
  • Free Black people have "no 'casion" to say who they belong to, or must "lie erbout it," while Grandison is not "shame'" to name his owner.
  • He will "take keer er young Mars Dick" and won't let "none er dem cussed, low-down abolitioners ter come nigh me."
  • He fears being stolen by abolitionists and asks if he would be allowed to hit them.

Don't confuse: The excerpt presents Grandison's words but does not confirm whether they reflect his true feelings or are a performance for survival. The narrative voice notes Dick "was not exactly skeptical about Grandison's perfervid loyalty" but had been "a somewhat keen observer of human nature," suggesting doubt.

🎁 Incentives and control

The colonel uses multiple tools to secure Grandison's compliance:

  • Material comfort: "all you wanted to eat," "whiskey and tobacco as was good for you."
  • Social ties: Grandison is "sweet on your mother's maid, Betty," and the colonel has "promised to let 'em get married before long."
  • Promises: if Grandison pleases Dick, "he'll buy you a present, and a string of beads for Betty."
  • Fear: the colonel warns of Canada as "a dreary country" with "wildcats and wolves and bears," where "runaway niggers get sick and can't work, they are turned out to starve and die, unloved and uncared for."

Example: The colonel's strategy combines positive reinforcement (marriage, gifts) with frightening propaganda (Canada's dangers) to make escape seem both ungrateful and suicidal.

🎯 Dick's plan and its failure

💡 Dick's motive and method

  • Dick wants to free an enslaved person to prove his abolitionist credentials to Charity, who had challenged him to "do something to show that you are willing to put your money where your mouth is."
  • He cannot openly free Grandison because "if Grandison should go away, and by legal process be recaptured, his young master's part in the matter would doubtless become known, which would be embarrassing to Dick."
  • His strategy: "give Grandison sufficient latitude" and rely on "the force of the example and argument that his servant could scarcely fail to encounter" among free Black people and abolitionists.
  • "Grandison should have a fair chance to become free by his own initiative."

Key assumption: Dick expects that exposure to freedom and abolitionist arguments will naturally lead Grandison to escape, without Dick having to take direct action.

🏙️ New York and Boston experiments

Dick takes Grandison to cities with abolitionist activity:

  • He stays at "a hotel where an atmosphere congenial to Southern institutions was sedulously maintained" but employs "negro waiters" and "mulatto bell-boys."
  • Dick hopes Grandison will "foregather and palaver with them sooner or later" and "they would speedily inoculate him with the virus of freedom."
  • He "kept Grandison supplied with pocket-money, and left him mainly to his own devices."
  • Every night Dick "hoped he might have to wait upon himself," but "every night when he came in Grandison was on hand."

✉️ Escalation in Boston

When New York fails, Dick moves to Boston and writes anonymous letters to abolitionists:

"A wicked slaveholder from Kentucky, stopping at the Revere House, has dared to insult the liberty-loving people of Boston by bringing his slave into their midst. Shall this be tolerated? Or shall steps be taken in the name of liberty to rescue a fellow-man from bondage?"

  • Dick sends Grandison on errands to create opportunities for abolitionist contact.
  • He observes "a long-haired, sharp-featured man" follow Grandison and walk beside him.
  • Later, Dick encounters Grandison "in conversation with a young white man in clerical garb."

🚫 Grandison's resistance to "rescue"

Despite these encounters, Grandison does not escape. Instead:

  • He tells Dick: "dese yer abolitioners is jes' pesterin' de life out er me tryin' ter git me ter run away."
  • "I don' pay no 'tention ter 'em, but dey riles me so sometimes dat I'm feared I'll hit some of 'em."
  • He did not mention the encounters earlier because "I did n' wanter 'sturb yo' min'."
  • He asks: "Is we gwine back home 'fo' long, Mars Dick?"
  • When Dick approaches during the conversation with the preacher, Grandison "edged away from the preacher and hastened toward his master, with a very evident expression of relief upon his countenance."

Example: The abolitionist preacher represents an opportunity for freedom, but Grandison treats him as a threat and Dick as safety—the opposite of what Dick expected.

🤔 Ambiguity and interpretation

🎭 Performed vs genuine loyalty

The excerpt leaves Grandison's true motives unclear:

Evidence for genuine loyaltyEvidence for strategic performance
Consistent behavior across settingsDick is "not exactly skeptical," implying doubt
"Expression of relief" when returning to DickGrandison knows he is being watched
Complaints about abolitionists match the colonel's warningsThe colonel's propaganda may have genuinely frightened him, or Grandison may be repeating what he knows Dick expects to hear
Asks to go homeAttachment to Betty and the plantation may be real constraints

Don't confuse: The narrative does not confirm which interpretation is correct at this point. The excerpt ends with Dick "inwardly curs[ing] the stupidity of a slave," but this reflects Dick's frustration, not an objective assessment of Grandison's intelligence or motives.

🧠 Dick's assumptions

Dick's plan rests on several beliefs:

  • That exposure to free Black people and abolitionists will naturally awaken a desire for freedom.
  • That Grandison's loyalty is shallow and will crumble under "the force of example and argument."
  • That "human nature" will lead Grandison to choose freedom when given the chance.

The excerpt shows these assumptions failing, but does not explain why. Possible reasons (not confirmed in the excerpt):

  • Grandison may genuinely fear the unknown dangers the colonel described.
  • He may be attached to Betty and the plantation community.
  • He may be performing loyalty because he knows escape attempts can be punished.
  • He may be waiting for a safer opportunity.
  • He may be planning something Dick does not anticipate.

📖 Narrative irony

The excerpt's title references Jack London, but the content does not mention him—this may be a section heading error or the excerpt is part of a larger work.

The narrative voice subtly undercuts the colonel's ideology:

  • The colonel's speech about the "blissful relationship" is followed by the phrase "The colonel always became indignant at the mere thought of such wickedness," suggesting his defensiveness.
  • Grandison's exaggerated dialect and effusive gratitude ("oozing gratitude at every pore") may signal performance rather than sincerity.
  • Dick's hope to "lose" Grandison and his view of the task as "needless trouble" reveal his shallow commitment to abolition—he wants credit for freeing someone without effort or risk.

Key tension: The excerpt presents a situation where the enslaved person refuses freedom, the would-be liberator is frustrated, and the reader cannot yet determine whether Grandison is trapped by fear and conditioning or is exercising a form of agency the other characters do not recognize.

15

The Passing of Grandison

4.3 Booker T. Washington

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

"The Passing of Grandison" reveals that enslaved people could use the mask of loyalty to outwit their masters, turning the slaveholders' own assumptions about Black fidelity into the instrument of their freedom.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • The central irony: Dick Owens tries repeatedly to make Grandison run away to Canada, but Grandison appears utterly loyal—until the ending reveals Grandison was planning a mass escape all along.
  • Masks and deception: Multiple characters hide their true intentions; Grandison's performance of loyalty is the most profound deception in the story.
  • Dick's motive: Dick wants to impress Charity Lomax by doing something "heroic" (freeing a slave), but his efforts are self-serving, not genuinely abolitionist.
  • Common confusion: The colonel interprets Grandison's return as proof of Black contentment under slavery, but the ending shows this interpretation was completely wrong.
  • The real hero: Grandison, not Dick, is the story's true hero—he engineers the freedom of his entire family while manipulating both Dick and the colonel.

🎭 Dick's failed attempts to "free" Grandison

🎯 Dick's shallow heroism

  • Dick Owens wants to do something "heroic" to win Charity Lomax's admiration.
  • Charity mentions a Yankee who was imprisoned for helping a slave escape; Dick decides he will free his father's slave, Grandison, to prove his own heroism.
  • Key detail: Dick's motive is entirely selfish—he wants Charity's approval, not genuine justice for enslaved people.
  • Example: Dick writes to Charity boasting about "how hard he was working" to accomplish something "for her sake."

🚫 Every obvious method fails

Dick tries multiple strategies to make Grandison run away, but all fail:

MethodWhat Dick doesGrandison's response
Exposure to abolitionistsTakes Grandison to abolitionist cities (Boston, etc.)Grandison remains at Dick's side
Temptation with moneyLeaves Grandison alone with $100 and the keyGrandison guards the money faithfully
Direct opportunity in CanadaTells Grandison he is free to walk away at Niagara FallsGrandison refuses, says he fears losing his master
  • Dick becomes increasingly frustrated: "I do not deserve to be an American citizen... if I am not smart enough to get rid of you."
  • Don't confuse: Dick's frustration is not moral outrage at slavery—it's annoyance that his plan to impress Charity isn't working.

💰 The bribe that works

  • Finally, Dick bribes a hostler (stable worker) and two other men to kidnap Grandison while he pretends to be distracted.
  • Grandison "disappears" while Dick is inside the inn.
  • Dick returns home alone, tells his father a "straight story" (that Grandison was lost in Canada), and wins Charity's agreement to marry him.

🎪 Grandison's performance of loyalty

🎭 The mask of the faithful servant

  • Throughout the northern trip, Grandison performs extreme loyalty:
    • He repeatedly expresses fear of abolitionists.
    • He insists he only wants to stay with "Mars Dick."
    • At Niagara Falls (in Canada), he begs to go back "ober de ribber" because he fears losing his master.
  • The colonel later praises this loyalty: "the servile virtue most highly prized and most sedulously cultivated by the colonel and his kind."

🔍 Clues the reader can see

  • The excerpt does not explicitly reveal Grandison's inner thoughts during the trip.
  • However, the ending forces the reader to reinterpret everything: Grandison was never truly loyal—he was gathering information and waiting for the right moment.
  • Key mechanism: Grandison uses the slaveholders' own racist assumptions (that enslaved people are naturally loyal and content) as a shield for his real plan.

🏃 Grandison's dramatic return

  • Three miles from home, the colonel finds Grandison "ragged and travel-stained, bowed with weariness," barely able to speak.
  • Grandison tells a story: abolitionists kidnapped him, locked him in a hut, starved him on bread and water for three weeks, and debated killing him—but he escaped and made his way back "to the old plantation, back to his master, his friends, and his home."
  • The colonel is overjoyed and deeply moved: "There were almost tears in the colonel's eyes."
  • The colonel's interpretation: This story proves that enslaved people are happy and loyal, and that abolitionists are violent fanatics.

❓ Dick's skepticism

  • Dick suggests the kidnapping story "sounds a little improbable" and asks if there's "some more likely explanation."
  • The colonel dismisses this: "Nonsense, Dick; it's the gospel truth!"
  • Irony: Dick is closer to the truth (that Grandison is deceiving them), but even he doesn't grasp the full scope of Grandison's plan.

🚂 The mass escape and the real hero

🏃‍♀️ The whole family vanishes

  • About three weeks after Grandison's return, the colonel discovers that Grandison, his wife Betty, his mother aunt Eunice, his father uncle Ike, his brothers Tom and John, and his little sister Elsie have all disappeared.
  • "So much valuable property could not be lost without an effort to recover it."
  • The colonel and a U.S. marshal chase the fugitives northward through Ohio, but the Underground Railroad helps them stay ahead.

🚢 The final glimpse

  • The colonel reaches a Lake Erie port just in time to see the family on a steamboat heading to Canada.
  • "On the stern of a small steamboat which was receding rapidly from the wharf, with her nose pointing toward Canada, there stood a group of familiar dark faces, and the look they cast backward was not one of longing for the fleshpots of Egypt."

  • Grandison points the colonel out to a crew member, who waves derisively.
  • The colonel shakes his fist, but it is too late—"the incident was closed."

🎖️ Who is the real hero?

  • Dick's "heroism": shallow, self-serving, and ultimately ineffective—he only succeeded in giving Grandison the information and opportunity he needed.
  • Grandison's heroism: he used Dick's trip to learn the route to Canada, returned to gather his entire family, and executed a mass escape.
  • The story's title, "The Passing of Grandison," has multiple meanings:
    • Grandison "passes" from slavery to freedom.
    • Grandison "passes" as a loyal slave (wearing a mask).
    • The era of masters like the colonel is "passing" away (though they don't realize it).

🪞 Layers of trickery and irony

🎭 Who tricks whom?

TricksterVictimMethod
DickThe colonelPretends to be a responsible master while secretly trying to lose Grandison
DickCharityPretends his motive is heroic abolitionism, not just winning her approval
GrandisonDickPretends to be loyal while gathering intelligence for escape
GrandisonThe colonelPretends his return proves Black contentment; uses the time to plan the family's escape

🏆 Who wins and who loses?

  • Winner: Grandison and his family—they gain their freedom.
  • Loser: The colonel—he loses valuable "property" and his faith in "the fidelity of the negro to his master" is shattered.
  • Ambiguous: Dick—he wins Charity and avoids punishment, but the story suggests he never understands the deeper meaning of what happened.

🎪 The colonel's blindness

  • The colonel's racist ideology prevents him from seeing the truth.
  • He interprets Grandison's return as proof of loyalty, never suspecting it was a strategic move.
  • Even after the escape, the colonel likely blames "abolitionists" rather than recognizing Grandison's agency and intelligence.
  • Key irony: The colonel's belief in Black inferiority and loyalty is precisely what allows Grandison to deceive him so completely.

📖 Realism and social critique

  • The story uses realistic detail (the Underground Railroad, the Fugitive Slave Act, the role of U.S. marshals) to ground its satire.
  • It exposes the hypocrisy of slaveholders who claim enslaved people are "happy" and "loyal."
  • It shows that the real relationship between master and slave is one of domination, and that enslaved people had to use deception and "masking" to survive and resist.
  • Don't confuse: This is not a story that glorifies slavery or suggests enslaved people were content—the ending makes clear that freedom, not loyalty, was Grandison's true goal all along.
16

W. E. B. Du Bois

4.4 W. E. B. Du Bois

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

The excerpt provided contains no substantive content about W. E. B. Du Bois; it consists entirely of unrelated literary passages from late 19th-century American fiction (Charlotte Perkins Gilman's "The Yellow Wall-Paper" and Frank Norris's writings on Naturalism and McTeague).

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • The excerpt does not discuss W. E. B. Du Bois, his ideas, his writings, or his historical context.
  • The text includes portions of "The Yellow Wall-Paper" (a short story about a woman's mental deterioration under a "rest cure").
  • The text includes Frank Norris's essay "A Plea for Romantic Fiction" and excerpts from his novel McTeague, both illustrating American Literary Naturalism.
  • No biographical, philosophical, or sociological material related to Du Bois appears in the source.

📄 Content mismatch

📄 What the excerpt contains

The source excerpt is drawn from a textbook chapter on American Realism (1865–1890) and Naturalism (1890–1914). It includes:

  • Charlotte Perkins Gilman's "The Yellow Wall-Paper": a first-person narrative of a woman confined to a room, obsessing over wallpaper patterns, and descending into madness.
  • Frank Norris's critical essay: "A Plea for Romantic Fiction," which argues that Romance (in Norris's sense) can explore the "unplumbed depths of the human heart" and should not be limited to medieval settings or polite middle-class life.
  • Excerpts from McTeague: Norris's novel about a brutish, slow-witted dentist in San Francisco, illustrating Naturalist themes of heredity, environment, and determinism.

🚫 What is missing

  • No mention of W. E. B. Du Bois: The excerpt does not reference Du Bois's life, his scholarship (The Souls of Black Folk, Black Reconstruction), his concept of "double consciousness," his role in founding the NAACP, or his sociological and historical work on race in America.
  • No relevant context: The chapter focuses on literary movements (Realism and Naturalism) and white American authors; Du Bois's name appears only in a chapter title (4.4) without accompanying text.

⚠️ Note for review

⚠️ Excerpt does not support the title

Because the source contains no substantive discussion of W. E. B. Du Bois, it is not possible to extract core concepts, key mechanisms, or important conclusions about him from this material. The excerpt appears to be a mismatch or placeholder; the actual content on Du Bois is absent.

To study W. E. B. Du Bois, you will need a different source that covers his intellectual contributions, historical significance, and writings.

17

4.5 Zane Grey

4.5 Zane Grey

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

The excerpt contains no substantive content about Zane Grey; it consists entirely of the final pages of "The Yellow Wall-Paper" by Charlotte Perkins Gilman and unrelated reading questions.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • The excerpt is mislabeled; the title "4.5 Zane Grey" does not match the content.
  • The actual content is the climactic ending of "The Yellow Wall-Paper," a short story about a woman's mental breakdown.
  • The narrator becomes convinced she must free a woman trapped behind the wallpaper pattern.
  • The story concludes with the narrator creeping around the room and her husband fainting.
  • No information about Zane Grey (the Western novelist) appears in this excerpt.

📄 Content mismatch

📄 What the excerpt contains

The provided text is not about Zane Grey. Instead, it includes:

  • Pages 200–205 from a literature anthology section on Realism (1865–1890)
  • The final scenes of "The Yellow Wall-Paper" by Charlotte Perkins Gilman
  • Three reading comprehension questions about the story
  • A partial chapter heading ("2.12 CHAPTER TWO KEY")

❌ What is missing

  • No biographical information about Zane Grey
  • No discussion of Grey's Western novels or writing style
  • No analysis of Grey's place in American literature
  • No connection between the excerpt content and the section title

📖 Actual story content (for reference only)

📖 The narrator's final actions

The excerpt shows the narrator's complete psychological break:

  • She becomes obsessed with "freeing" a woman she sees trapped behind the wallpaper pattern
  • She tears off yards of wallpaper during the night and day
  • She locks herself in the room and throws the key outside
  • She begins creeping around the room, fitting her shoulder into a "smooch" mark along the wall
  • She declares: "I've got out at last, in spite of you and Jane"

👨‍⚕️ John's response

  • John (the narrator's husband and doctor) returns to find the door locked
  • He calls, pounds, and cries for an axe
  • When he finally enters and sees his wife creeping around the room, he faints
  • The narrator continues creeping, now having to step over his body "every time"

🔍 Reading questions provided

The excerpt includes three study questions that ask readers to:

  1. Consider causes of the narrator's illness beyond postpartum depression
  2. Analyze how John controls and restricts his wife
  3. Close-read the room's details (bars on windows, etc.) to reinterpret the narrator's confinement

⚠️ Note on this review

This review documents what is actually present in the excerpt. Since the excerpt contains no information about Zane Grey, no meaningful review notes about that author can be produced from this source material. The mismatch between title and content suggests a formatting or compilation error in the source document.

18

Robert Frost

5.3 Robert Frost

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

The excerpt provided does not contain substantive content about Robert Frost; instead, it includes the ending of "The Yellow Wall-Paper," reading questions, chapter key terms, and an introduction to Naturalism (1890–1914) with a focus on Frank Norris.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • The excerpt begins with the climax of Gilman's "The Yellow Wall-Paper" and study questions about the narrator's illness and confinement.
  • Chapter 2 key terms list Realism-era authors and concepts; Chapter 3 introduces Naturalism as a literary movement.
  • Naturalism rejected Realism's genteel limitations and embraced provocative, grim subject matter influenced by Darwin's evolution and Zola's theories.
  • Frank Norris distinguished Romance (exploring variations from normal life) from Realism (confining itself to normal life's surface).
  • The excerpt does not discuss Robert Frost; the title "5.3 Robert Frost" does not match the provided text.

📚 Content mismatch

📚 Expected vs. actual content

The section title indicates Robert Frost should be covered, but the excerpt contains:

  • The conclusion of Charlotte Perkins Gilman's "The Yellow Wall-Paper" (a Realism-era story).
  • Reading and review questions for that story.
  • A list of Chapter 2 key terms (Realism period, 1865–1890).
  • Chapter 3 introduction and learning outcomes (Naturalism, 1890–1914).
  • A biographical sketch and essay by Frank Norris, a Naturalist writer.

No information about Robert Frost—his life, poetry, style, or themes—appears in the excerpt.

🧩 What the excerpt does contain: Naturalism overview

🧩 Naturalism as a literary movement

Naturalism: a literary style that pushed beyond Realism's limitations, embracing provocative, grim subject matter and depicting humans as animals shaped by heredity and environment.

  • Naturalist writers (Frank Norris, Stephen Crane, Jack London, Theodore Dreiser, and others) rejected Realism's tendency to avoid offending genteel readers.
  • They wrote about the human condition in "starker, grimmer contexts," including taboo subjects: prostitution, alcoholism, domestic violence, crime, madness, and degeneration.
  • Influenced by Charles Darwin's evolution theory and Émile Zola's Le Roman Expérimental (1880).

🔬 Zola's theory and scientific determinism

  • Zola argued for "intense Realism" that did not look away from base, dirty, or ugly aspects of life.
  • He saw humans in animal terms and proposed the novel as a "scientific experiment": once ingredients (hereditary traits, social environment) are added, the story unfolds with scientific accuracy.
  • American Naturalists similarly characterized humans as beings "influenced—and even determined—by forces of heredity and environment beyond their understanding or control."

🧪 Core features of Naturalistic works

FeatureDescription
Subject matterTaboo topics (violence, vice, crime); grim, sordid settings (slums, wilderness, sea)
Human depictionHumans as upright animals driven by instinct, heredity, and environment; little or no free will
Narrative styleJournalistic, detached perspective; characters often nameless to emphasize cosmic insignificance
Plot structure"Plot of decline"—steady degeneration or death of the protagonist
WorldviewPessimistic materialistic determinism; nature indifferent or hostile; ideals (justice, morality) shown as illusions

Don't confuse: Naturalism vs. Realism—both use detailed, authentic writing, but Naturalism goes further by depicting humans as animals subject to deterministic forces and by tackling subjects Realism avoided.

🖋️ Frank Norris and his theory

🖋️ Norris's life and influences

  • Born 1870 in Chicago; moved to San Francisco at fourteen; studied painting in Paris and creative writing at Harvard (no degree).
  • Influenced early by romantic literature (Sir Walter Scott's Ivanhoe) but shifted to Realism and Naturalism at Harvard.
  • Admired Émile Zola; wrote McTeague (1899), The Octopus (1901), and The Pit (1903).
  • Worked as a journalist and war reporter; discovered Theodore Dreiser's Sister Carrie while working in publishing.
  • Died at thirty-two from illness.

🎭 Norris's distinction: Romance vs. Realism

In "A Plea for Romantic Fiction," Norris argues:

Romance: fiction that "takes cognizance of variations from the type of normal life."
Realism: fiction that "confines itself to the type of normal life."

  • Norris claims Romance (not sentimentalism) is a "keen, finely tempered instrument" that goes "straight through the clothes and tissues and wrappings of flesh down deep into the red, living heart of things."
  • Realism "stultifies itself"—it "notes only the surface of things," treating beauty as "only a geometrical plane, without dimensions and depth."
  • Realism is "the drama of a broken teacup, the tragedy of a walk down the block"—a formal visit that reveals nothing deeper.
  • Norris calls for Romance to explore contemporary life, not just medieval settings: "are there no other things that are romantic, even in this—falsely, falsely called—humdrum world of to-day?"

Example: Norris imagines Romance as a woman entering an average middle-class American home and uncovering intense, instructive dramas—not just polite manners.

🦷 McTeague as Naturalistic practice

  • Protagonist: McTeague, a "poor crude dentist of Polk Street, stupid, ignorant, vulgar" with "enormous bones and corded muscles"—more animal than man.
  • Plot: upward trajectory from mining-camp poverty to middle-class dentist life in San Francisco, then back down to poverty, isolation, and trouble.
  • Theme: McTeague is "a victim of instinctive, hereditary, and environmental influences and forces beyond his knowledge or his control."

Don't confuse: Norris's "Romance" with escapist medieval tales—he uses the term to mean fiction that explores deep, often dark variations from normal life, including the sordid and unlovely (like Zola's novels).

🔍 Reading questions for "The Yellow Wall-Paper"

🔍 Analyzing the narrator's illness

The excerpt includes three study questions:

  1. Beyond postpartum depression: Does the narrator's illness reside entirely in her body? Consider other causes for her malaise—why isn't she getting better?
  2. John's control: How does the narrator's "loving doctor-husband John" talk to and control her? What does he allow and forbid her to think and do?
  3. Unreliable narrator and setting: The narrator misinterprets her confinement (e.g., assumes she is in a former child's playroom). Close-read details (bars on windows) and contrast her interpretation with your own sense of what they mean.

Purpose: These questions guide readers to see social and environmental causes of mental illness, not just biological ones—a theme relevant to both Realism and Naturalism.

19

5.4 Wallace Stevens

5.4 Wallace Stevens

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

The excerpt does not contain content about Wallace Stevens; instead, it presents Frank Norris's literary manifesto contrasting Realism and Romance, followed by the opening chapter of his novel McTeague, which illustrates naturalist fiction through detailed depiction of a protagonist shaped by heredity, environment, and physical determinism.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • Realism vs. Romance distinction: Realism captures only surface appearances and ordinary life, while Romance penetrates beneath surfaces to reveal hidden truths and deeper human realities.
  • Romance's true mission: Romance should be a teacher addressing all of life—including poverty and squalor—not merely an entertainer confined to castles and historical settings.
  • Common confusion: Romance is not limited to "silken robes and golden crowns" in exotic settings; she belongs equally in tenements, brownstone houses, and contemporary urban life.
  • Naturalist characterization in McTeague: The protagonist is depicted as physically powerful but mentally "heavy, slow to act, sluggish," shaped by brutal family history and limited education—illustrating deterministic forces.
  • Naturalist detail: The excerpt uses meticulous physical description (food, body, surroundings) to establish character as product of environment and biology.

📖 The Literary Manifesto: Realism vs. Romance

📏 What Realism offers—and its limits

Realism: "notes only the surface of things... Beauty is not even skin deep, but only a geometrical plane, without dimensions and depth, a mere outside."

  • Realism captures what can be "actually see[n], or actually hear[d]."
  • It is "minute"—focused on small, ordinary events:
    • "the drama of a broken teacup"
    • "the tragedy of a walk down the block"
    • "the excitement of an afternoon call"
  • The narrator's critique: Realism is like "a formal visit, from which I may draw no conclusions"—you see probable people but learn nothing deeper.
  • Realism says "That is life," but the narrator insists "it is not."

Don't confuse: Realism's detailed observation with depth; the excerpt argues Realism stops at surfaces and "goes no further than the Realist himself can actually see."

🔍 What Romance reveals

Romance: goes beyond surfaces to uncover "a complete revelation of my neighbour's secretest life."

  • Romance would not stop in the front parlor discussing "medicated flannels and mineral waters."
  • She would go "upstairs... prying, peeping, peering into the closets of the bedroom, into the nursery, into the sitting-room."
  • What Romance finds hidden:
    • "a heartache... between the pillows of the mistress's bed"
    • "a memory carefully secreted in the master's deed-box"
    • "a great hope amid the books and papers"
    • "an affair, or... an intrigue, in the scented ribbons and gloves"
  • Romance "would pick here a little and there a little, making up a bag of hopes and fears and a package of joys and sorrows—great ones, mind you."
  • Then she would say: "That is Life!"

Example: If Romance knocked over the "little bisque fisher-boy" statuette, "you might find underneath the base... hidden away, tucked away—what? God knows. But something that would be a complete revelation."

🌍 Romance belongs everywhere, not just in castles

🏰 The common misconception

  • People take Romance "across the water—ages and the flood of years" to the "Grandes Salles" of the Middle Ages and Renaissance.
  • But they refuse to "take her across the street to your neighbour's front parlour."
  • They won't walk with her on Fifth Avenue, Beacon Street, or Michigan Avenue.
  • They say she would be "out of place... inappropriate" in contemporary, ordinary settings.

🏙️ Romance in the modern city

The narrator protests "against limiting her to such places and such times."

Where Romance is acceptedWhere Romance actually belongs (but is rejected)
Castles of the Middle AgesThe brownstone house on the corner
Renaissance châteauxThe office-building downtown
Chatelaine's chamberThe tenements of the East Side of New York
Dungeon of the man-at-armsAmong "the rags and wretchedness, the dirt and despair"
  • "This very day, in this very hour, she is sitting among the rags and wretchedness, the dirt and despair of the tenements of the East Side of New York."
  • The narrator challenges: "look for Romance... among the vicious ruffians, male and female, of Allen Street and Mulberry Bend?"
  • "I tell you she is there, and to your shame be it said you will not know her in those surroundings."

Don't confuse: Romance with escapism; the excerpt insists Romance addresses harsh contemporary realities, not just historical fantasy.

🎓 Romance as teacher, not entertainer

📚 The higher mission

  • Romance should be "by right divine a teacher sent from God," not "a harlequin, a tumbler, a sword-dancer."
  • If Romance calls from "the squalour of a dive, or the awful degradation of a disorderly house, crying: 'Look! listen! This, too, is life. These, too, are my children! Look at them, know them and, knowing, help!'"—readers stop their ears and avert their eyes.
  • They demand Romance only "amuse and entertain you, singing you sweet songs and touching the harp of silver strings with rosy-tipped fingers."

⚖️ The division of labor

RealismRomance
"do the entertaining with its meticulous presentation of teacups, rag carpets, wall-paper and haircloth sofas""belongs the wide world for range, and the unplumbed depths of the human heart"
"stopping with these, going no deeper than it sees""the mystery of sex, and the problems of life, and the black, unsearched penetralia of the soul of man"
"choosing the ordinary, the untroubled, the commonplace"wears "the camel's-hair and feeds upon the locusts... to cry aloud unto the people, 'Prepare ye the way of the Lord; make straight his path'"
  • "God help you if at last you take from Romance her mission of teaching."
  • "You, the indolent, must not always be amused."
  • "What matter the silken clothes, what matter the prince's houses?"—Romance's purpose transcends decoration.

🦷 McTeague Chapter 1: Naturalist characterization in action

🍖 Sunday routine as character revelation

The opening establishes McTeague through his habitual Sunday:

  1. Dinner at two: "thick gray soup; heavy, underdone meat, very hot, on a cold plate; two kinds of vegetables; and a sort of suet pudding, full of strong butter and sugar."
  2. Steam beer: stops at Joe Frenna's saloon, buys a pitcher.
  3. In his "Dental Parlors": takes off coat and shoes, unbuttons vest, crams stove with coke.
  4. Digestion: lies back in operating chair, reading, drinking beer, smoking "his huge porcelain pipe."
  5. Sleep: "gorged with steam beer, and overcome by the heat of the room, the cheap tobacco, and the effects of his heavy meal, he dropped off to sleep."
  6. Concertina: wakes, plays "some half-dozen very mournful airs."
  • "McTeague looked forward to these Sunday afternoons as a period of relaxation and enjoyment. He invariably spent them in the same fashion."
  • "These were his only pleasures—to eat, to smoke, to sleep, and to play upon his concertina."

Why this matters: The meticulous detail establishes McTeague as creature of appetite and routine, not intellect or aspiration—a naturalist portrait of determinism.

🧬 Heredity and environment

Family background:

  • Father: "For thirteen days of each fortnight... a steady, hard-working shift-boss of the mine. Every other Sunday he became an irresponsible animal, a beast, a brute, crazy with alcohol."
    • Died "corroded with alcohol, collapsing in a few hours."
  • Mother: "an overworked drudge, fiery and energetic for all that, filled with the one idea of having her son rise in life and enter a profession."
    • Cooked for forty miners with help of a Chinaman.
    • Left McTeague "some money—not much, but enough to set him up in business."

Education: "He had learnt it after a fashion, mostly by watching the charlatan operate. He had read many of the necessary books, but he was too hopelessly stupid to get much benefit from them."

Don't confuse: McTeague's professional status with genuine education or refinement; the excerpt emphasizes his limited, haphazard training and intellectual incapacity.

💪 Physical determinism

"McTeague was a young giant, carrying his huge shock of blond hair six feet three inches from the ground; moving his immense limbs, heavy with ropes of muscle, slowly, ponderously."

Physical description:

  • Hands: "enormous, red, and covered with a fell of stiff yellow hair; they were hard as wooden mallets, strong as vises, the hands of the old-time car-boy."
  • Strength: "Often he dispensed with forceps and extracted a refractory tooth with his thumb and finger."
  • Head: "square-cut, angular; the jaw salient, like that of the carnivora."

Mental character:

"McTeague's mind was as his body, heavy, slow to act, sluggish."

  • "Yet there was nothing vicious about the man."
  • "Altogether he suggested the draught horse, immensely strong, stupid, docile, obedient."

The naturalist equation: Body = mind; physical traits determine mental capacity; animal comparisons ("carnivora," "draught horse") reduce human to biological specimen.

🏠 The "Dental Parlors" as environment

Professional status: "When he opened his 'Dental Parlors,' he felt that his life was a success, that he could hope for nothing better."

The space: "In spite of the name, there was but one room."

  • Corner room, second floor, over branch post-office.
  • Functions as both office and bedroom: "sleeping on the big bed-lounge against the wall opposite the window."
  • Equipment: operating chair, dental engine, movable instrument rack in bay window; washstand behind screen "where he manufactured his moulds."
  • Furnishings: "Three chairs, a bargain at the second-hand store, ranged themselves against the wall with military precision."
  • Decoration: steel engraving of Lorenzo de' Medici's court ("bought because there were a great many figures in it for the money"), rifle manufacturer's calendar "which he never used."

Clientele: "butcher boys, shop girls, drug clerks, and car conductors."

Social standing: "He made but few acquaintances. Polk Street called him the 'Doctor' and spoke of his enormous strength."

Example: The single room serving as both workplace and bedroom, the second-hand chairs, the calendar never used—each detail reinforces McTeague's limited aspirations and marginal social position, illustrating how environment shapes and reflects character in naturalist fiction.

20

William Carlos Williams: McTeague Excerpt

5.5 William Carlos Williams

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

This excerpt from McTeague demonstrates naturalist fiction's focus on deterministic character portrayal and detailed environmental observation, showing how a protagonist's physical and mental limitations shape his passive existence within a carefully documented urban setting.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • Naturalist characterization: McTeague is portrayed through physical determinism—his body (huge, slow, strong) directly mirrors his mind (heavy, sluggish, docile).
  • Environmental documentation: The text exhaustively catalogs Polk Street's daily rhythms, inhabitants, and social strata, treating setting as a character itself.
  • Class observation: The narrative distinguishes social layers—from laborers and shop workers to "grand ladies from the fashionable avenue"—without editorial judgment.
  • Common confusion: This is not psychological realism (exploring inner consciousness) but naturalism (showing how biology and environment determine behavior).
  • Narrative technique: The prose uses accumulation and repetition to create a sense of mechanical routine and inevitability.

🧬 Deterministic characterization

🧬 Physical-mental parallelism

"McTeague's mind was as his body, heavy, slow to act, sluggish."

  • The text establishes a direct equation between physical traits and mental capacity.
  • McTeague is described as:
    • A "young giant" six feet three inches tall
    • Possessing "immense limbs, heavy with ropes of muscle"
    • Hands "hard as wooden mallets, strong as vises"
    • A "square-cut, angular" head with "salient" jaw "like that of the carnivora"
  • Each physical detail reinforces mental limitation: "heavy," "slow," "sluggish."
  • The comparison to a "draught horse, immensely strong, stupid, docile, obedient" completes the deterministic portrait.

Don't confuse: This is not character development or psychology—naturalism presents character as fixed by heredity and physiology, not shaped by choices or growth.

🦷 Professional competence without intelligence

  • McTeague practices dentistry but his education was acquired "in a haphazard way."
  • He can perform physical tasks (extracting teeth with thumb and finger, making gold fillings) but works "slowly, mechanically."
  • The text notes: "His head was quite empty of all thought, and he did not whistle over his work as another man might have done."
  • Example: He makes dental fillings with "manual dexterity that one sometimes sees in stupid persons"—skill divorced from intellect.

🎯 Limited ambition

  • McTeague "felt that his life was a success, that he could hope for nothing better."
  • His only dream: a "huge gilded tooth" sign—modest, material, unattainable.
  • This contrasts with Marcus Schouler's empty political rhetoric, showing different forms of limitation.

🏙️ Environmental documentation

🏙️ The Dental Parlors as microcosm

The text catalogs every object in McTeague's single room:

CategoryDetailsSignificance
FurnitureThree second-hand chairs, bed-lounge, washstand, marble-topped tableCheap, utilitarian, military precision
Professional equipmentOperating chair, dental engine, instrument rackMixed with living space—no separation
DecorationsSteel engraving (bought for quantity of figures), rifle calendar (never used), stone pug dog, thermometerRandom, meaningless accumulation
BooksSeven volumes of dental texts, back numbers of journalsUnread, decorative
Personal itemsConcertina, bird seed, canarySimple pleasures
  • The room "exhaled a mingled odor of bedding, creosote, and ether"—sensory detail emphasizing the blurred boundary between work and life.
  • The bay window becomes McTeague's "point of vantage from which he watched the world go past"—passive observation, not participation.

🕐 Polk Street's daily cycle

The narrative devotes extensive passages to documenting the street's routine:

7:00 AM – Morning labor

  • Newsboys and day laborers appear
  • Plumbers' apprentices, carpenters, street workers, plasterers
  • Cable company workers, night clerks going home, police roundsmen, Chinese market gardeners
  • "This little army of workers, tramping steadily in one direction"

7:00–8:00 AM – Breakfast hour

  • Shopkeepers taking down shutters
  • Smell of coffee and frying steaks
  • Waiters crossing with trays

8:00–9:00 AM – White-collar workers

  • Clerks and shop girls "dressed with a certain cheap smartness, always in a hurry"
  • Employers following later: "whiskered gentlemen with huge stomachs, reading the morning papers"

Morning – School children

  • "Filling the air with a clamor of shrill voices"
  • Suddenly disappearing, leaving stragglers

11:00 AM – Upper-class ladies

  • From "the great avenue a block above Polk Street"
  • "Handsome women, beautifully dressed," "gloved and veiled and daintily shod"
  • "Little impromptu receptions" at market stalls

Evening – Amusement

  • Theatre-goers in high hats and opera cloaks
  • Street inhabitants strolling, groups of girls on corners
  • Tamale men, Salvation Army band

Night – Silence

  • 11:00 PM: lights extinguished
  • 1:00 AM: cable stops, "abrupt silence"
  • Only sounds: policeman's footfalls, ducks and geese in closed market

Why this matters: The exhaustive catalog creates a sense of mechanical repetition—"Day after day, McTeague saw the same panorama unroll itself." The street operates like clockwork, and McTeague is merely one fixed element within it.

🔍 Social stratification

The text distinguishes classes without commentary:

  • Laborers: identified by tools and clothing (lead pipe, lunch baskets, clay-soiled overalls)
  • Shop workers: "cheap smartness," hurrying, watching the clock
  • Employers: leisure, stomachs, newspapers, flowers in buttonholes
  • Upper-class women: know tradesmen by name, hold social gatherings while shopping
  • Street inhabitants: plumbers' apprentices, ribbon-counter girls, families above shops

Don't confuse: This is not social criticism or advocacy—naturalism observes and documents class as an environmental fact, like weather.

🗣️ Dialogue and social performance

🗣️ Marcus Schouler's empty rhetoric

Marcus represents a different form of limitation—verbal rather than physical:

  • He speaks in "stock phrases of the professional politician": "Outraged constituencies," "cause of labor," "wage earners," "opinions biased by personal interests"
  • "These rolled off his tongue with incredible emphasis, appearing at every turn of his conversation"
  • He discusses political economy "at the top of his voice, vociferating, shaking his fists, exciting himself with his own noise"
  • Example: "It's the capitalists that's ruining the cause of labor... white-livered drones, traitors, with their livers white as snow, eatun the bread of widows and orphuns"

McTeague's response:

  • "Absolutely stupid, and understanding never a word, McTeague would answer: 'Yes, yes, that's it—self-control—that's the word.'"
  • "Stupefied with his clamor, McTeague answered, wagging his head: 'Yes, that's it; I think it's their livers.'"

Why this matters: The dialogue reveals mutual incomprehension—Marcus performs political passion without substance, McTeague echoes without understanding. Both are trapped in their limitations.

🎭 Pose and performance

  • Marcus "pretended to execrate" capitalists—"It was a pose which he often assumed, certain of impressing the dentist"
  • He "suddenly fell calm again, forgetting his pose all in an instant" when shifting topics
  • His knowledge was "picked up in a haphazard way," yet he managed to impress Old Grannis "with a torrent of empty phrases that he delivered with fierce gestures"

Don't confuse: This is not satire of political activism—it's naturalist observation of how individuals perform social roles without genuine understanding or agency.

💑 The Old Grannis–Miss Baker subplot

💑 Romance without contact

"Singularly enough, they were not even acquaintances; never a word had passed between them."

  • Both over sixty, "current talk amongst the lodgers" says they are "in love with each other"
  • Their interactions consist only of passing on the stairway "with averted eyes, pretending a certain preoccupation, suddenly seized with a great embarrassment"
  • Between 4:00 and 6:00 PM, they sit in adjacent rooms, "listening and waiting, they did not know exactly for what, but near to each other, separated only by the thin partition"
  • They have learned each other's habits: Miss Baker's tea at quarter of five, Old Grannis's pamphlet binding

🧵 Miss Baker's invented narrative

  • She speculates that Old Grannis is "the younger son of a baronet; that there are reasons for his not coming to the title; his stepfather wronged him cruelly"
  • The text clarifies: "No one had ever said such a thing. It was preposterous to imagine any mystery connected with Old Grannis."
  • "Miss Baker had chosen to invent the little fiction, had created the title and the unjust stepfather from some dim memories of the novels of her girlhood."

Why this matters: Even romantic imagination is shown as derivative and delusional—Miss Baker cannot create original meaning, only recycle old novel plots. The "romance" is entirely passive, consisting of proximity and routine rather than action or communication.

🔍 Naturalist irony

  • The text asks: "Was it the first romance in the lives of each? Did Old Grannis ever remember a certain face... Did Miss Baker still treasure up... some faded daguerreotype?"
  • Answer: "It was impossible to say."
  • The narrative refuses psychological access or sentimental resolution—these are observable behaviors, not inner lives to be explored or validated.

📝 Narrative technique

📝 Accumulation and catalog

The prose builds through exhaustive listing:

  • Every item in McTeague's room
  • Every type of worker on Polk Street
  • Every hour of the street's daily cycle
  • Every step in making gold fillings ("mats," "blocks," "cylinders")

Effect: Creates a sense of overwhelming material detail that traps characters within documented reality. The world is too full of objects and routines for individual agency to matter.

🔁 Repetition and routine

Key phrases emphasize mechanical repetition:

  • "Day after day, McTeague saw the same panorama unroll itself"
  • "The street never failed to interest him" (passive observation)
  • "He worked slowly, mechanically"
  • "His head was quite empty of all thought"

Don't confuse: This is not stream-of-consciousness or interior monologue—the text deliberately shows the absence of complex thought, not its flow.

🎨 Sensory detail without interpretation

The text provides concrete sensory information but withholds meaning:

  • "An acrid odor of ink rose upward to him"
  • "The whole place exhaled a mingled odor of bedding, creosote, and ether"
  • "Everywhere was the smell of coffee and of frying steaks"

These details document environment but do not symbolize or interpret—they simply are, like the characters themselves.

21

5.6 Ezra Pound

5.6 Ezra Pound

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

This excerpt contains no content related to Ezra Pound; it is a passage from a naturalist novel depicting a dentist's growing attraction to a young female patient.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • The excerpt is from a work of American Naturalism (1890–1914), not a discussion of Ezra Pound.
  • The passage describes McTeague, a dentist, performing dental work on Trina Sieppe and gradually becoming infatuated with her.
  • The narrative focuses on McTeague's awakening sexual desire and his transformation from viewing women with suspicion to obsession.
  • The excerpt includes secondary characters (Miss Baker, Maria Macapa, Marcus Schouler) who provide context and atmosphere.
  • Common confusion: The title "5.6 Ezra Pound" does not match the content, which is a naturalist fiction excerpt, not literary criticism or biography.

📖 Content mismatch

📖 What the excerpt actually contains

The provided text is a narrative excerpt from a naturalist novel, not an analysis or discussion of Ezra Pound. The passage:

  • Features a dentist named McTeague working in his "Parlors" on Polk Street
  • Describes his interactions with patients and neighbors
  • Chronicles his growing attraction to Trina Sieppe, a young woman whose tooth he is repairing
  • Includes detailed descriptions of characters, setting, and McTeague's psychological state

🚫 What is missing

  • Any mention of Ezra Pound
  • Any discussion of Pound's poetry, criticism, or influence
  • Any analysis of modernist literature or Imagism
  • Any biographical information about Pound
  • Any literary theory or historical context related to Pound's work

📝 Narrative summary (for context only)

🦷 The dental procedure

McTeague undertakes a difficult dental operation on Trina Sieppe:

  • She has a broken tooth and a loose, discolored tooth from a swing accident
  • McTeague decides to attempt a complex crown-and-bridge procedure rather than simple extraction
  • The work takes a fortnight, with Trina visiting nearly every other day for two to three hours
  • The excerpt notes: "It was the most difficult operation he had ever performed. He bungled it considerably, but in the end he succeeded passably well."

💭 McTeague's transformation

The passage emphasizes McTeague's psychological change:

  • Initially he has "that intuitive suspicion of all things feminine—the perverse dislike of an overgrown boy"
  • Gradually, "the feminine element suddenly entered his little world"
  • He becomes obsessed: "Little by little, by gradual, almost imperceptible degrees, the thought of Trina Sieppe occupied his mind from day to day, from hour to hour"
  • The text describes his desire as "strong and brutal. It was resistless, untrained, a thing not to be held in leash an instant"
  • He keeps her extracted tooth "wrapped in a bit of newspaper in his vest pocket" and takes it out to look at it

🏠 Secondary characters

The excerpt introduces several minor characters:

  • Miss Baker: an elderly dressmaker who gossips about Old Grannis, her neighbor; she invents romantic fictions about him
  • Maria Macapa: a Spanish-American maid described as "queer in the head"; she always responds to questions about her name with "Name is Maria—Miranda—Macapa. Had a flying squirrel an' let him go"
  • Marcus Schouler: Trina's cousin, who brings her to McTeague and describes him as "the strongest duck you ever saw"

⚠️ Note on source material

⚠️ Excerpt does not match title

The title "5.6 Ezra Pound" suggests this should be a section about the modernist poet Ezra Pound, but the excerpt provided is entirely unrelated fiction. No review notes about Ezra Pound can be faithfully extracted from this passage.

22

5.7 Marianne Moore

5.7 Marianne Moore

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

The excerpt depicts McTeague's first romantic awakening through his attraction to Trina, dramatizing the naturalist theme of an internal struggle between civilized restraint and hereditary animal instinct.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • McTeague's awakening: Trina represents his first encounter with romantic desire, suddenly enlarging his narrow world beyond simple pleasures like concertinas and beer.
  • The dental-chair intimacy: regular sittings create a charged atmosphere where physical proximity intensifies his obsession and desire.
  • The crisis moment: when Trina is unconscious under anesthesia, McTeague experiences a violent internal battle between "the animal" and "the better self."
  • Hereditary determinism: the excerpt frames his struggle as rooted in "hereditary evil"—vices passed down through generations that he cannot escape or fully understand.
  • Common confusion: this is not a story of simple temptation; it is a naturalist depiction of biological and inherited forces beyond the character's rational control.

🌅 McTeague's romantic awakening

🌅 Discovery of "the feminine element"

  • Before Trina, McTeague's world was limited: his only experiences were his work, simple pleasures (concertinas, steam beer), and occasional contact with men.
  • Trina's arrival introduces "the woman, the whole sex, an entire new humanity, strange and alluring."
  • The excerpt emphasizes that he discovers not just one person but an entire dimension of life he had ignored.

"The feminine element suddenly entered his little world… an entire new humanity, strange and alluring, that he seemed to have discovered."

🔥 Awakening of desire

  • The text describes this as a late, sudden awakening: "The male virile desire in him tardily awakened, aroused itself, strong and brutal."
  • Key characteristics of this desire:
    • Resistless and untrained: "a thing not to be held in leash an instant."
    • Gradual occupation of his mind: "by gradual, almost imperceptible degrees, the thought of Trina Sieppe occupied his mind from day to day, from hour to hour."
  • Example: he keeps the tooth he extracted from her wrapped in newspaper, taking it out to hold in his palm "seized with some strange elephantine sentiment."

🧩 Transformation of worldview

  • The excerpt states: "Everything had to be made over again. His whole rude idea of life had to be changed."
  • He realizes "there was something else in life besides concertinas and steam beer."
  • Don't confuse: this is not portrayed as enlightenment or growth; it is described as confusion and entanglement—"exasperated at the delicate, subtle mesh in which he found himself entangled."

🦷 The dental sittings as romantic theater

🦷 Physical intimacy in the "Dental Parlors"

  • Trina comes on Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays; McTeague must bend closely over her during the work.
  • The excerpt catalogs the sensory contact:
    • His hands touch her face, cheeks, chin.
    • Her lips press against his fingers.
    • She breathes warmly on his forehead and eyelids.
    • The odor of her hair—"a charming feminine perfume, sweet, heavy, enervating"—penetrates his nostrils.

💫 Effect on McTeague

  • Physical sensations: "his flesh pricked and tingled… a veritable sensation of faintness passed over this huge, callous fellow."
  • Momentary spasms: "His jaws suddenly gripped together vise-like."
  • But mostly he enjoys "a certain strong calmness, blindly happy that she was there."

🎭 The romance of routine

  • The text frames these sittings as romantic despite the unglamorous setting:
    • "Foul atmosphere, overheated by the little stove and heavy with the smell of ether, creosote, and stale bedding."
    • Yet they "had all the charm of secret appointments and stolen meetings under the moon."
  • Example: this is McTeague's "first romance, his first idyl"—the excerpt emphasizes his crudeness ("stupid, ignorant, vulgar… sham education and plebeian tastes") to highlight the incongruity.

⚔️ The crisis: animal vs. better self

⚔️ The moment of vulnerability

  • During a deep filling, Trina experiences pain; McTeague reluctantly uses ether anesthesia (he distrusts nitrous oxide).
  • She becomes unconscious: "absolutely without defense… unconscious and helpless, and very pretty."
  • The excerpt marks this as a turning point: "Suddenly the animal in the man stirred and woke."

🐆 The internal battle

"It was a crisis—a crisis that had arisen all in an instant; a crisis for which he was totally unprepared."

The struggle is described in vivid, physical terms:

The animalThe better self
"The sudden panther leap… lips drawn, fangs aflash, hideous, monstrous, not to be resisted""The other man, the better self that cries, 'Down, down,' without knowing why"
"Evil instincts… so close to the surface leaped to life, shouting and clamoring""Grips the monster; fights to strangle it, to thrust it down and back"
  • Physical symptoms of the struggle:
    • Teeth grinding with "a little rasping sound."
    • Blood singing in his ears.
    • Face flushed scarlet.
    • Hands twisting "like the knotting of cables."
    • "The fury in him was as the fury of a young bull in the heat of high summer."

🛡️ McTeague's resistance

  • He mutters repeatedly: "No, by God! No, by God!"
  • His reasoning (dimly grasped): if he yields, Trina will never be the same to him—"never so radiant, so sweet, so adorable."
  • He imagines "the smudge of a foul ordure, the footprint of the monster" across her forehead—"a sacrilege, an abomination."
  • He seeks refuge in his work, trying to focus on the technical task.

💋 The moment of weakness

  • Despite his resolution, he suddenly kisses her "grossly, full on the mouth."
  • "The thing was done before he knew it."
  • He is "terrified at his weakness at the very moment he believed himself strong."
  • He throws himself back into work "with desperate energy" and regains control: "he was the master; the animal was downed, was cowed for this time, at least."

⚠️ The permanent change

  • The excerpt emphasizes that the struggle is not over: "But for all that, the brute was there. Long dormant, it was now at last alive, awake."
  • From now on: "he would feel its presence continually; would feel it tugging at its chain, watching its opportunity."
  • The text laments: "Ah, the pity of it! Why could he not always love her purely, cleanly?"

🧬 Hereditary determinism and naturalist philosophy

🧬 The "foul stream of hereditary evil"

The excerpt explicitly frames McTeague's struggle in terms of inherited, biological determinism:

"Below the fine fabric of all that was good in him ran the foul stream of hereditary evil, like a sewer. The vices and sins of his father and of his father's father, to the third and fourth and five hundredth generation, tainted him."

  • This is not a moral failing he chose; it is presented as an inescapable biological inheritance.
  • The text asks: "Why should it be? He did not desire it. Was he to blame?"

🤔 McTeague's inability to understand

  • The excerpt states: "McTeague could not understand this thing."
  • "It had faced him, as sooner or later it faces every child of man; but its significance was not for him."
  • "To reason with it was beyond him."
  • His only response: "an instinctive stubborn resistance, blind, inert."

🧩 Naturalist worldview

  • Don't confuse: this is not a psychological or moral drama in the traditional sense.
  • The naturalist framework presents human behavior as shaped by:
    • Heredity: "the evil of an entire race flowed in his veins."
    • Instinct: responses that are "unreasoned," "blind," beyond rational control.
    • Environment: the "foul atmosphere" of the dental parlor, the physical proximity, the sensory stimulation.
  • McTeague is portrayed as a battleground for forces he cannot fully comprehend or master.

💬 The proposal and Trina's response

💬 McTeague's sudden declaration

  • After Trina recovers from the anesthesia, she says, "I never felt a thing," and smiles at him.
  • McTeague, holding his tools, suddenly says with "unreasoned simplicity and directness of a child":
    • "Listen here, Miss Trina, I like you better than any one else; what's the matter with us getting married?"
  • The excerpt breaks off as Trina sits up quickly and then draws back.

🎯 Characterization through the proposal

  • The proposal is described as childlike and direct, lacking sophistication or romantic phrasing.
  • It follows immediately after the violent internal struggle, suggesting that McTeague's emotions are raw and unprocessed.
  • The juxtaposition: moments before, he was battling "the animal"; now he proposes marriage with innocent simplicity.
23

5.8 T. S. Eliot

5.8 T. S. Eliot

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

The excerpt contains no content related to T. S. Eliot; instead, it presents scenes from a naturalist novel depicting characters struggling with internal impulses, social awkwardness, and material greed.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • Content mismatch: The title indicates T. S. Eliot, but the excerpt is from a naturalist fiction work (likely Frank Norris's McTeague).
  • Naturalist themes present: hereditary determinism, animal instincts overpowering reason, economic survival, and environmental influence on character.
  • Character types: a dentist tormented by desire and jealousy, two elderly neighbors paralyzed by social timidity, and a junk collector driven by greed.
  • Common confusion: The excerpt does not discuss modernist poetry, literary criticism, or any biographical/critical material about T. S. Eliot.
  • Substantive content: The passage illustrates naturalist literary techniques—biological determinism, detailed environmental description, and characters shaped by forces beyond their control.

⚠️ Content discrepancy

⚠️ Title vs. excerpt

  • The section title "5.8 T. S. Eliot" suggests discussion of the modernist poet and critic.
  • The excerpt contains no mention of T. S. Eliot, his works, his critical theories, or modernist poetry.
  • Instead, the text is narrative fiction from the American Naturalist period (1890–1914), as indicated by the page headers.

📖 What the excerpt actually contains

  • Three extended scenes from a novel:
    1. McTeague's internal struggle after proposing to Trina
    2. Maria Macapa collecting junk from Old Grannis and Miss Baker
    3. Maria's visit to Zerkow the junk dealer
  • The writing demonstrates naturalist literary conventions: deterministic worldview, focus on base instincts, detailed physical description, and characters trapped by circumstance.

🧬 Naturalist themes in the excerpt

🧬 Hereditary determinism

"The evil of an entire race flowed in his veins... The vices and sins of his father and of his father's father, to the third and fourth and five hundredth generation, tainted him."

  • McTeague believes he is biologically predetermined by ancestral "evil."
  • He describes this as "the foul stream of hereditary evil, like a sewer" running beneath "all that was good in him."
  • The character cannot reason with or understand this force; he can only offer "instinctive stubborn resistance, blind, inert."
  • Don't confuse: This is not moral choice or psychological complexity—it is biological fate presented as inescapable inheritance.

🐾 Animal instinct vs. civilization

  • McTeague refers to "the brute" and "the animal" within himself that has been "long dormant" but is now "alive, awake."
  • After his crisis, he feels it "tugging at its chain, watching its opportunity."
  • His physical description emphasizes size and strength: "huge hands," "immense square-cut head," "enormous brute strength," "the hands of the old-time car-boy."
  • Example: When proposing to Trina, he can only repeat the same question "over and over again" with "the unreasoned simplicity and directness of a child"—language fails him, instinct drives him.

🎭 Character portraits

🦷 McTeague: desire and torment

  • A dentist who has abruptly proposed to his patient Trina and been refused.
  • After the proposal, their relationship changes: "all the charm of their intimacy was gone... she was circumspect, reserved, distant."
  • He is consumed by obsessive desire: "Night after night he lay broad awake thinking of Trina... His head burnt and throbbed. The palms of his hands were dry."
  • He is also tormented by jealousy of his friend Marcus, who is also interested in Trina.
  • The excerpt shows him "flung at length upon the bed-lounge, gnawing at his fingers in an excess of silent fury."
  • Key naturalist element: He "followed his desire blindly, recklessly, furious and raging at every obstacle"—no rational deliberation, only compulsion.

👵👴 Old Grannis and Miss Baker: social paralysis

  • Two elderly neighbors who are "keeping company after their fashion" by leaving their doors slightly open.
  • Both are extremely timid and neat: "You two are just alike... just as neat as pins."
  • Maria's intrusion forces them into indirect communication, which causes "veritable torture."
  • Physical symptoms of their distress: Old Grannis's "fingers trembled so that he pricked them with his needle"; Miss Baker "dropped her spoon twice."
  • After Maria leaves, "their nervousness would not wear off... In a word, the afternoon was spoiled."
  • Social determinism: Their extreme timidity and adherence to propriety trap them in perpetual awkwardness; they cannot act on their feelings.

💰 Zerkow: embodiment of greed

"Zerkow was a Polish Jew—curiously enough his hair was fiery red. He was a dry, shrivelled old man of sixty odd."

  • Described with animal imagery: "thin, eager, cat-like lips of the covetous; eyes that had grown keen as those of a lynx."
  • His physical features reflect his obsession: "claw-like, prehensile fingers—the fingers of a man who accumulates, but never disburses."
  • The narrator states directly: "greed—inordinate, insatiable greed—was the dominant passion of the man."
  • Metaphor: "He was the Man with the Rake, groping hourly in the muck-heap of the city for gold, for gold, for gold."
  • His environment mirrors his character: the junk shop is "dark and damp, and foul with all manner of choking odors," filled with "all the detritus that a great city sloughs off."

🗑️ Maria Macapa: the scavenger

  • Collects junk throughout the building "once every two months," searching "from garret to cellar."
  • She is "exasperating the lodgers with her persistence and importunity."
  • Sells junk to Zerkow for small amounts: "sometimes paid her as much as three cents a pound."
  • Uses the money to imitate social betters: "trying to dress like the girls who tended the soda-water fountain... She was sick with envy of these young women."
  • She also steals from McTeague: "Often she stole McTeague's gold, almost under his very eyes; indeed, it was so easy to do so that there was but little pleasure in the theft."
  • Economic determinism: Her poverty drives her scavenging; her envy drives her petty theft and imitation.

🏙️ Naturalist technique

🏙️ Environmental description

  • The junk shop as symbolic space:
ElementDescriptionSymbolic meaning
Interior"dark and damp, and foul with all manner of choking odors"Moral and physical decay
Contents"a world of debris, dust-blackened, rust-corroded... every trade, every class of society"The city's waste, social stratification
Function"the last abiding-place, the almshouse, of such articles as had outlived their usefulness"End point of consumption cycle
  • Miss Baker's room as contrast: "a marvel of neatness," with "three Gorham spoons laid in exact parallels" and "decorous geraniums"—order and propriety as defense against chaos.

🔬 Deterministic narration

  • Characters are presented as shaped by forces they cannot control:
    • McTeague: biological inheritance and animal instinct
    • Old Grannis and Miss Baker: social conditioning and timidity
    • Zerkow: economic obsession and ethnic stereotype
    • Maria: poverty and social envy
  • The narrator often tells rather than shows: "It was impossible to look at Zerkow and not know instantly that greed... was the dominant passion of the man."
  • Naturalist conviction: Character is fate; individuals are products of heredity, environment, and economic circumstance, not free moral agents.
24

5.9 Edna St. Vincent Millay

5.9 Edna St. Vincent Millay

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

The excerpt provided contains no content related to Edna St. Vincent Millay; instead, it presents narrative passages from a naturalist novel depicting characters Maria, Zerkow, and McTeague in scenes involving junk-dealing and obsessive greed.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • Content mismatch: The title references Edna St. Vincent Millay (a poet), but the excerpt is prose fiction from the Naturalism period (1890–1914).
  • Main characters: Maria (a Mexican woman who collects junk), Zerkow (a Polish-Jewish junk dealer consumed by greed), and McTeague (a dentist).
  • Central motif: Zerkow's obsessive desire for gold, triggered by Maria's story of a legendary gold plate service.
  • Genre markers: The text exhibits naturalist literary characteristics—detailed physical descriptions, deterministic themes, focus on lower social classes, and psychological compulsion.
  • No substantive content on Millay: The excerpt does not discuss Millay's poetry, biography, themes, or literary significance.

📖 What the excerpt actually contains

📖 Narrative setting and characters

The excerpt comes from a naturalist novel (pages 232–235) and focuses on:

  • Maria Macapa: A woman of mixed race who collects junk from a boarding house and sells it to Zerkow; she tells a recurring story about a gold plate service from her childhood.
  • Zerkow: A sixty-year-old Polish-Jewish junk dealer with red hair, described as consumed by greed; he operates a shop filled with urban debris.
  • McTeague: A dentist mentioned in the later portion; he has finished dental work on a woman named Trina and suffers from feelings of inadequacy.

The setting is urban, lower-class, with detailed descriptions of squalor and material obsession.

🎭 The gold plate story

Maria tells Zerkow about a service of gold dishes she claims her family owned in Central America:

  • Over a hundred pieces, all pure gold.
  • Described as "red, shining, pure gold, orange red" that rang like bells when struck.
  • Included dinner dishes, tureens, pitchers, platters, a punch-bowl carved with figures and grapes.
  • Maria claims it was worth "a million dollars."

Ambiguity in the text: The narrator questions whether this service ever existed or is a product of Maria's "diseased imagination," noting she is "sane on all subjects but that of the famous service of gold plate."

💰 Zerkow's obsession

Zerkow's character is defined by greed:

"Greed—inordinate, insatiable greed—was the dominant passion of the man."

  • He is called "the Man with the Rake, groping hourly in the muck-heap of the city for gold."
  • When Maria shows him three gold pellets (dental fillings), his physical reaction is extreme: "His fingers twitched and hooked themselves into his palms, his thin lips drew tight across his teeth."
  • He forces himself to believe Maria's story despite its improbability, "lashed and harassed by a pitiless greed that checked at no tale of treasure, however preposterous."
  • He experiences "positive misery" and "a spasm of anguish" at the thought of the lost treasure.

Don't confuse: Zerkow's belief is not rational acceptance; the text emphasizes he "chose to believe it, forced himself to believe it"—his greed overrides skepticism.

🎨 Naturalist literary features

The excerpt demonstrates characteristics of American literary Naturalism (1890–1914):

FeatureHow it appears in the excerpt
DeterminismCharacters seem driven by forces beyond their control (Zerkow's greed, Maria's obsession)
Lower-class focusJunk dealers, boarding houses, urban poverty
Detailed physical descriptionZerkow's "thin, eager, cat-like lips," "claw-like, prehensile fingers"
Psychological compulsionZerkow's inability to resist the gold story; McTeague's feelings of inadequacy
Urban decayThe junk shop as "the last abiding-place, the almshouse, of such articles as had outlived their usefulness"

❌ Absence of Millay content

❌ What is missing

The excerpt contains:

  • No mention of Edna St. Vincent Millay.
  • No poetry analysis or poetic texts.
  • No discussion of Millay's themes (love, death, feminism, nature, etc.).
  • No biographical information about Millay.
  • No connection to Millay's historical period (she was active primarily 1912–1950, overlapping with but extending beyond Naturalism).

Conclusion: The excerpt does not support the creation of review notes on Edna St. Vincent Millay. The content is narrative prose fiction illustrating naturalist themes through characters obsessed with material wealth and social inadequacy.

25

5.10 e. e. cummings

5.10 e. e. cummings

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

The excerpt contains no content about e. e. cummings; it is a passage from a naturalist novel (1890–1914) depicting a romantic conflict between two friends over the same woman.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • What the excerpt actually contains: a scene from a naturalist-era novel in which McTeague confesses to his friend Marcus that he has fallen in love with Trina, Marcus's cousin and romantic interest.
  • The central conflict: both men care for Trina, but McTeague's passion is described as overwhelming and involuntary, while Marcus's feelings are less intense and more casual.
  • Marcus's resolution: he decides to "pull out" and give Trina up to McTeague, motivated by a sense of magnanimity and the recognition that McTeague's love is stronger.
  • Common confusion: the excerpt is labeled "5.10 e. e. cummings" but contains no discussion of the poet e. e. cummings; it is a passage from a naturalist novel (likely Frank Norris's McTeague).
  • Naturalist themes: the passage emphasizes determinism and the idea that passion is "something that's just stronger than you are"—a force beyond individual control.

📖 Content mismatch

📖 Expected vs. actual content

  • The title "5.10 e. e. cummings" suggests the excerpt should discuss the modernist poet e. e. cummings (known for experimental typography, lowercase styling, and unconventional syntax).
  • Instead, the excerpt is a narrative passage from a naturalist novel set in the 1890–1914 period.
  • There is no mention of e. e. cummings, his poetry, his style, or his literary significance.

📖 What the excerpt does contain

  • A scene between two characters: McTeague (a dentist) and Marcus Schouler (his friend).
  • McTeague confesses his love for Trina Sieppe, who is Marcus's cousin and romantic interest.
  • The passage explores themes of friendship, romantic rivalry, and involuntary passion.

🎭 The romantic conflict

🎭 McTeague's confession

  • McTeague has fallen in love with Trina, a patient who came to his dental office.
  • He describes his feelings as involuntary and overwhelming:
    • "I can't help it. It ain't my fault, is it?"
    • "It's something that's just stronger than you are, that's all."
  • He emphasizes physical proximity as the catalyst: "I was so close to her I touched her face every minute, and her mouth, and smelt her hair and her breath."
  • The passage describes McTeague as "like some colossal brute trapped in a delicate, invisible mesh, raging, exasperated, powerless to extricate himself."

🎭 Marcus's position

  • Marcus "kept company" with Trina and was acknowledged as her "young man."
  • However, his feelings are less intense:
    • He "liked all girls pretty well."
    • He had not yet proposed and thought of marriage as something for "some future period."
  • The excerpt states: "Marcus came back to the table and sat down sideways upon it."

🎭 The resolution

  • Marcus recognizes that McTeague's passion is stronger: "this huge, brutal fellow was capable of a greater passion than himself, who was twice as clever."
  • He decides to withdraw: "Well, say, Mac, go ahead. I guess you—you want her pretty bad. I'll pull out; yes, I will. I'll give her up to you, old man."
  • The passage notes "the sense of his own magnanimity" as a motivating factor.

🧬 Naturalist themes

🧬 Determinism and involuntary passion

The excerpt presents love as "something that's just stronger than you are"—a force beyond individual control.

  • McTeague insists he could not have prevented his feelings: "It came on so slow that I was, that—that—that it was done before I knew it, before I could help myself."
  • This reflects the naturalist literary movement's emphasis on determinism: characters are shaped by forces (biological, social, environmental) beyond their control.
  • Example: McTeague says, "I wouldn't 'a' had ut happen for anything, if I could 'a' stopped it, but I don' know, it's something that's just stronger than you are."

🧬 Disruption and complexity

  • The passage describes how Trina's arrival disrupted McTeague's previously calm life:
    • "A month ago he was perfectly content; he was calm and peaceful, taking his little pleasures as he found them."
    • "A woman had entered his small world and instantly there was discord. The disturbing element had appeared."
  • The metaphor: "Wherever the woman had put her foot a score of distressing complications had sprung up, like the sudden growth of strange and puzzling flowers."

🧬 Class and self-perception

  • McTeague sees himself as unworthy of Trina:
    • "She was too good for him; too delicate, too refined, too prettily made for him, who was so coarse, so enormous, so stupid."
  • He envies a rival dentist: "the young fellow on the corner, for instance, the poser, the rider of bicycles, the courser of grey-hounds."
  • This reflects naturalist attention to social class and self-consciousness.

⚠️ Summary: no e. e. cummings content

Expected (based on title)Actual (in excerpt)
Discussion of e. e. cummings (poet, 1894–1962)Narrative passage from a naturalist novel
Modernist poetry, experimental style, lowercase typographyRomantic conflict between two friends over a woman
Literary analysis or biographyThemes of determinism, involuntary passion, and friendship

Conclusion: The excerpt does not contain any information about e. e. cummings. It is a passage from a naturalist novel (likely Frank Norris's McTeague, published 1899) that explores themes of involuntary passion, friendship, and self-sacrifice. The title "5.10 e. e. cummings" does not match the content.

26

F. Scott Fitzgerald

5.11 F. Scott Fitzgerald

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

This excerpt from a naturalist novel depicts how romantic desire disrupts McTeague's simple life and how Marcus's theatrical self-sacrifice resolves—at least temporarily—the conflict between two friends who love the same woman.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • The central conflict: McTeague and Marcus are both in love with Trina Sieppe, creating an impossible situation between "pals."
  • How desire is portrayed: McTeague experiences love as an overwhelming, physical force—"something that's just stronger than you are"—beyond rational control.
  • Marcus's resolution: Marcus renounces Trina in a dramatic gesture, believing himself noble and self-sacrificing, though the text hints at the shallowness of his feelings.
  • Common confusion: Marcus thinks he loves Trina "conscientiously," but the excerpt shows he likes "all girls pretty well" and had no immediate marriage plans—don't mistake his theatrical emotion for deep attachment.
  • The naturalist lens: The excerpt frames love as a "disturbing element" that introduces chaos into McTeague's orderly existence, like "the sudden growth of strange and puzzling flowers."

🌊 The disruption of desire

🌊 McTeague's transformation

  • A month ago McTeague was "perfectly content," living a predictable, peaceful life.
  • Trina's arrival is described as the entry of a "disturbing element":

    "Wherever the woman had put her foot a score of distressing complications had sprung up, like the sudden growth of strange and puzzling flowers."

  • The metaphor emphasizes that love is involuntary, organic, and uncontrollable.
  • McTeague feels "life was too much for him"—he cannot manage the new emotional complexity.

🐻 The nature of McTeague's passion

  • McTeague describes his love as physical and overwhelming:
    • "She came there... three or four times a week, and she was the first girl I had ever known."
    • "I was so close to her I touched her face every minute, and her mouth, and smelt her hair and her breath."
  • He insists it happened "before I knew it, before I could help myself."
  • The text compares him to "some colossal brute trapped in a delicate, invisible mesh, raging, exasperated, powerless to extricate himself."
  • Example: McTeague cannot articulate his feelings clearly; he repeats "it's everything" and makes "helpless movements with both hands."
  • Don't confuse: This is not romantic idealization—it is portrayed as a compulsive, almost animalistic force.

🎭 Marcus's theatrical renunciation

🎭 The moment of sacrifice

  • When Marcus learns McTeague also loves Trina, he makes an impulsive decision:

    "Well, say, Mac... go ahead. I guess you—you want her pretty bad. I'll pull out; yes, I will. I'll give her up to you, old man."

  • Marcus is moved by his own gesture:
    • "The sense of his own magnanimity all at once overcame Marcus."
    • "He saw himself as another man, very noble, self-sacrificing... so good, so magnificent, so heroic, that he almost sobbed."
  • The narrator notes: "There was no doubt he thought himself sincere. At that moment he almost believed he loved Trina conscientiously."

🎭 The shallowness beneath the drama

  • The text reveals Marcus's feelings are not as deep as McTeague's:
    • Marcus "liked all girls pretty well."
    • He had "put off this matter of marriage to some future period; it would be some time—a year, perhaps, or two."
    • He "kept company" with Trina but "knew plenty of other girls."
  • Marcus recognizes that "McTeague loved Trina more than he did; that in some strange way this huge, brutal fellow was capable of a greater passion than himself."
  • Don't confuse: Marcus's tears and grand gestures are real in the moment, but the excerpt frames them as self-dramatization rather than genuine heartbreak.

🤝 Masculine friendship and its rituals

🤝 The bond between "pals"

  • McTeague and Marcus are described as close friends who take long walks together "sometimes to the park, sometimes to the Presidio, sometimes even across the bay."
  • They have "the masculine horror of any demonstration of friendship"—they express affection indirectly.
  • The renunciation scene becomes a moment of heightened male bonding:

    "What a fine thing was this friendship between men! the dentist treats his friend for an ulcerated tooth and refuses payment; the friend reciprocates by giving up his girl. This was nobility."

  • The text invokes classical models: "It was Damon and Pythias; it was David and Jonathan; nothing could ever estrange them."

🤝 The billiard-ball incident

  • After the emotional climax, Marcus and McTeague engage in a comic, physical contest:
    • Marcus bets he can fit a billiard ball in his mouth; McTeague tries and gets it stuck.
    • "McTeague sweated with terror; inarticulate sounds came from his crammed mouth; he waved his arms wildly."
  • This scene deflates the earlier drama and returns the men to a realm of physical, boyish competition.
  • Example: The two friends' relationship oscillates between high emotion and crude physicality—both are ways of avoiding direct emotional expression.

🌸 Trina and the picnic

🌸 Trina's warmth

  • When McTeague and Marcus visit the Sieppes, Trina greets McTeague enthusiastically:

    "How do you do, Doctor McTeague... It's nice to see you again. Look, see how fine my filling is."

  • She is "delighted" and "appeared positively glad to see him."
  • This contrasts sharply with McTeague's earlier fear that "she would freeze him with a stare; he would be shown the door."

🌸 The picnic as ritual

  • The Sieppe family picnic is described in detail: Mr. Sieppe organizes it like a military expedition, shouting orders and waving his rifle.
  • Trina explains: "We go off on these picnics almost every week... and almost every holiday, too. It is a custom."
  • The picnic represents ordinary, domestic life—a world McTeague might enter if he wins Trina.
  • During the walk, Trina and McTeague have a simple, meandering conversation about swimming, snakes, and Sacramento.
  • Don't confuse: The picnic is not romantic or dramatic—it is mundane, familial, and repetitive, contrasting with the intense emotions McTeague feels.

🧩 Naturalist themes

🧩 Determinism and helplessness

  • McTeague repeatedly insists he "can't help it":
    • "It ain't my fault, is it?"
    • "It's something that's just stronger than you are, that's all."
  • The text frames desire as a force that acts upon characters, not something they choose.
  • Example: McTeague's passion is compared to a trap—he is "like some colossal brute trapped in a delicate, invisible mesh."

🧩 Class and self-perception

  • McTeague sees himself as unworthy of Trina:
    • "She was too good for him; too delicate, too refined, too prettily made for him, who was so coarse, so enormous, so stupid."
  • He envies "the young fellow on the corner... the poser, the rider of bicycles, the courser of grey-hounds" with "salmon-pink neckties and his astonishing waistcoats."
  • This self-doubt is rooted in class and physical appearance—McTeague feels his size and clumsiness disqualify him.

🧩 The assumption of Trina's consent

  • Neither McTeague nor Marcus considers that Trina might refuse:

    "It had not appeared to either of them that Trina might refuse McTeague."

  • The men negotiate her fate between themselves, treating her as a prize to be given or taken.
  • Don't confuse: The text does not endorse this assumption—it presents it as part of the characters' limited perspective.
27

Ernest Hemingway

5.12 Ernest Hemingway

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

This excerpt from Frank Norris's McTeague dramatizes how Trina's sudden physical surrender to McTeague paradoxically diminishes his desire while binding her irrevocably to him, illustrating naturalism's view that instinct and chance—not conscious choice—govern human relationships.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • The picnic scene: McTeague and Trina spend a day at Schuetzen Park with her family, where McTeague experiences intense longing through proximity to Trina's belongings and personal space.
  • The kiss and reversal: When McTeague physically overpowers Trina and kisses her, she surrenders instantly, but his desire immediately cools while her attachment intensifies.
  • Gendered paradox of desire: The text argues that men desire women for what they withhold, while women worship men for what they yield—each concession gained reduces the man's desire, each surrender made increases the woman's adoration.
  • Naturalist determinism: Neither character chose this outcome; "mysterious instincts as ungovernable as the winds of heaven" and blind chance, not free will, knit their lives together.
  • Common confusion: This is not a love story about mutual affection—it is a naturalist study of how physical attraction, power, and submission trap people in relationships that may lead to their "undoing."

🎭 The picnic and domestic intimacy

🚂 The day at Schuetzen Park

  • The Sieppe family, McTeague, Marcus, and Trina spend a day at the park.
  • Key moments include:
    • Mr. Sieppe's failed toy steamboat experiment (it explodes, leading to August being punished).
    • Clam digging, a large communal lunch (clam chowder, sausages, beer, Gotha truffle).
    • McTeague and Trina laugh together constantly; he is "with Trina constantly."
  • The family invites McTeague and Marcus to stay overnight at their home in Oakland.
  • Why it matters: The picnic "decided matters"—it marks the turning point where McTeague begins courting Trina regularly (Sundays and Wednesdays), displacing Marcus.

🛏️ McTeague in Trina's bedroom

  • That night, McTeague is given Trina's room to sleep in.
  • He stands motionless at first, feeling "hideously out of place"—an intruder with "enormous feet," "colossal bones," "crude, brutal gestures."
  • Then he begins to feel "the charm of the little chamber":
    • "It was as though Trina were close by, but invisible."
    • He sees into "her daily life, her little ways and manners, her habits, her very thoughts."
  • He picks up her hairbrush and inhales "that heavy, enervating odor of her hair."
  • He opens her closet and is "spellbound" by her hanging clothes:
    • He recognizes the black dress from their first meeting, the jacket from the day he declared his feelings.
    • He plunges his face into the garments, "savoring their delicious odor with long breaths of luxury and supreme content."

Example: McTeague does not speak to Trina or touch her directly; instead, he experiences overwhelming desire through her objects—the hairbrush, the clothes—which carry her scent and presence.

Don't confuse: This is not romantic admiration of personality or character. The text emphasizes physical sensation (odor, texture) and possession ("a whole group of Trinas faced him there"). McTeague's attraction is rooted in sensory and material proximity, not intellectual or emotional connection.

💔 The kiss and the paradox of conquest

🌧️ The rainy afternoon proposal

  • Weeks later, on a rainy Wednesday in March, Trina meets McTeague at the B Street station.
  • They walk along the muddy flats and railroad tracks; McTeague talks about dentistry (forceps, tooth roots, his dream of a big gilded tooth sign).
  • Suddenly McTeague asks: "What's the good of waiting any longer? Why can't us two get married?"
  • Trina refuses repeatedly, saying "No" and "Because."
  • McTeague can only repeat: "Ah, come on! Ah, come on!"

💪 Physical overpowering and surrender

  • "Suddenly he took her in his enormous arms, crushing down her struggle with his immense strength."
  • "Then Trina gave up, all in an instant, turning her head to his. They kissed each other, grossly, full in the mouth."
  • The Overland train roars past, startling them both.

Why this moment matters: The text does not depict mutual consent or romantic persuasion. McTeague uses "immense strength" to "crush down her struggle"; Trina's surrender is physical, not verbal or reasoned.

🔄 The immediate reversal in McTeague

"The instant that Trina gave up, the instant she allowed him to kiss her, he thought less of her. She was not so desirable, after all."

  • This reaction is "faint," "subtle," "intangible," and McTeague doubts it even occurred.
  • Yet the text insists: "Was there not something gone from Trina now? Was he not disappointed in her for doing that very thing for which he had longed?"
  • The narrator generalizes:

"Perhaps he dimly saw that this must be so, that it belonged to the changeless order of things—the man desiring the woman only for what she withholds; the woman worshipping the man for that which she yields up to him. With each concession gained the man's desire cools; with every surrender made the woman's adoration increases."

Example: McTeague had longed to kiss Trina and have her accept him. The moment she does, his desire diminishes. Trina, by contrast, is now bound to him "irrevocably."

Don't confuse: This is not about McTeague changing his mind or Trina becoming less attractive. The text presents this as a universal, deterministic pattern ("the changeless order of things"), not a personal quirk.

😢 Trina's confusion and shame

  • Trina pulls away, flushed scarlet, sobbing.
  • She insists on going home alone: "Oh, I'm so—so,"—she could not find any words.
  • McTeague is "stunned, bewildered" by "this sudden, unaccountable change."
  • Yet he also feels "great joy": "I got her, by God! I got her, by God!"
  • His self-respect increases enormously: "The man that could win Trina Sieppe was a man of extraordinary ability."

🧬 Naturalist determinism and the "Woman" awakened

🌀 Trina's internal struggle

  • For days afterward, Trina lies awake, asking herself: "Do I love him? Do I love him?"
  • She recalls the kiss with "a veritable agony of shame" and also "a thrill of joy."
  • She had expected to marry Marcus someday, in a vague future. She "liked Cousin Mark very well."
  • Then "this cross-current had set in; this blond giant had appeared."

💥 The awakening of "the Woman"

"Until that rainy day by the shore of the bay Trina had lived her life with as little self-consciousness as a tree. She was frank, straightforward, a healthy, natural human being, without sex as yet. She was almost like a boy. At once there had been a mysterious disturbance. The woman within her suddenly awoke."

  • Trina had not loved McTeague at first; she was only "terrified."
  • If he had merely spoken and pleaded like Marcus, she "could have easily withstood him."
  • But he "had only to take her in his arms, to crush down her struggle with his enormous strength, to subdue her, conquer her by sheer brute force, and she gave up in an instant."

Why did she surrender?

  • "Why did she feel the desire, the necessity of being conquered by a superior strength? Why did it please her?"
  • "Something had leaped to life in her—something that had hitherto lain dormant, something strong and overpowering."
  • Trina knows she is "a pure girl" and that "this sudden commotion within her carried with it no suggestion of vice."

Don't confuse: The text does not frame Trina's response as moral weakness or conscious desire. It is presented as an involuntary, biological awakening—"natural, clean, spontaneous."

🎲 Chance and instinct, not choice

"Did she choose him for better or for worse, deliberately, of her own free will, or was Trina herself allowed even a choice in the taking of that step that was to make or mar her life?"

  • The narrator answers: No.
  • "The Woman is awakened, and, starting from her sleep, catches blindly at what first her newly opened eyes light upon."
  • "It is a spell, a witchery, ruled by chance alone, inexplicable—a fairy queen enamored of a clown with ass's ears."
  • Trina "belonged to him, body and soul, for life or for death. She had not sought it, she had not desired it. The spell was laid upon her."
QuestionAnswer (according to the text)
Did Trina choose McTeague?No—"mysterious instincts as ungovernable as the winds of heaven" made the choice.
Did McTeague choose Trina?No—"Chance had brought them face to face."
Could they have avoided this?No—"Neither of them was allowed a voice in the matter."
Is this a blessing or curse?Unknown—"Was it a blessing? Was it a curse? It was all one."

⚠️ "Their undoing had already begun"

  • The very act that bound Trina to McTeague "had made her seem less desirable in his eyes."
  • "Their undoing had already begun."
  • "Yet neither of them was to blame."
  • "If they could have known, they would have shunned the fearful risk. But they were allowed no voice in the matter."

Example: A person might rationally avoid a dangerous relationship if they could foresee the outcome. But the text insists that McTeague and Trina were not given that option—instinct and chance overrode reason.

🎭 Marcus's melodrama and social context

🎭 Marcus's performance of renunciation

  • Marcus had been courting Trina and now "made the most of his renunciation."
  • He wrings McTeague's hand, sighs deeply, and exclaims: "What is my life! What is left for me? Nothing, by damn!"
  • "Never mind, old man. Never mind me. Go, be happy. I forgive you."
  • McTeague is "harassed with the thought of some shadowy, irreparable injury he had done his friend."
  • "Marcus seemed to take great pleasure in contemplating the wreck of his life. There is no doubt he enjoyed himself hugely during these days."

Don't confuse: Marcus is not genuinely heartbroken. The text makes clear he is performing a role and "enjoyed himself hugely." This contrasts with the involuntary, deterministic passion binding Trina and McTeague.

🏭 The Oakland setting

  • The Sieppes live "in a little box of a house at the foot of B Street."
  • The B Street station is a shed near "immense salt flats," "dump heaps," "the red-brown drum of the gas-works," and "the chimneys and workshops of an iron foundry."
  • The landscape is industrial, muddy, and bleak: "black mud bank," "wrecked and abandoned wharf," "dead seaweed," "bilge."
  • Yet "farther on, across the yellow waters of the bay, beyond Goat Island, lay San Francisco, a blue line of hills, rugged with roofs and spires."

Why it matters: The naturalist setting—industrial, deterministic, unglamorous—mirrors the characters' lack of control. The "dirty, muddy shore" and "abandoned gravel wagon" frame a relationship governed by instinct, not romance.

28

5.13 Arthur Miller

5.13 Arthur Miller

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

This excerpt from a naturalist novel demonstrates how characters are swept along by forces beyond their control—instinct, chance, and social convention—rather than by rational choice or free will.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • Determinism over choice: Characters are portrayed as helpless before "mysterious instincts as ungovernable as the winds of heaven"; neither Trina nor McTeague consciously chose their relationship.
  • Social class and propriety anxiety: The Polk Street residents occupy an uncertain social position between "tough" and "respectable," leading them to overcompensate with excessive formality.
  • Chance as plot driver: Trina's lottery win is a "chance-driven bolt" that arrives independent of merit or effort, reinforcing the naturalist theme that fate, not character, shapes outcomes.
  • Common confusion: Don't mistake the characters' attempts at propriety (theatre etiquette, formal dress) for genuine agency—the text insists they are "allowed no voice in the matter" of their destinies.

🎭 Naturalist determinism in relationships

🧬 Instinct overrides will

The excerpt opens with a rhetorical question about Trina's agency:

"Was it of her own free will, or was Trina herself allowed even a choice in the taking of that step that was to make or mar her life?"

  • The answer is clear: "The Woman is awakened" by forces outside her control.
  • The text uses metaphors of enchantment ("a spell, a witchery, ruled by chance alone") to emphasize passivity.
  • Why this matters: Naturalist fiction portrays humans as subject to biological and environmental forces, not rational actors.

🔗 Submission and its consequences

  • Trina "belonged to him, body and soul, for life or for death" after McTeague awakened desire in her.
  • Paradoxically, "the very act of submission that bound the woman to him forever had made her seem less desirable in his eyes."
  • The narrator declares: "Their undoing had already begun."
  • Don't confuse: This is not a romance plot where love conquers all; the text insists "neither of them was to blame" because "mysterious instincts" and "chance" control events, not the characters themselves.

⚖️ Fate vs. agency

ConceptWhat the text saysImplication
Choice"Neither of them had asked that this thing should be"No conscious decision
Blame"Neither of them was to blame"Moral responsibility is irrelevant
Knowledge"If they could have known, they would have shunned the fearful risk"Ignorance compounds helplessness

🎟️ Social class and the theatre outing

📏 Uncertain social position

"Polk Street rubbed elbows with the 'avenue' one block above. There were certain limits which its dwellers could not overstep; but unfortunately for them, these limits were poorly defined."

  • The residents are neither "tough" nor securely middle-class.
  • They "could never be sure of themselves" and "generally erred in the other direction, and were absurdly formal."
  • Why this matters: Social anxiety drives behavior as much as instinct; characters perform respectability because their status is precarious.

🎩 Overdoing propriety

  • Marcus insists McTeague must take Mrs. Sieppe to the theatre: "It wouldn't be the proper racket if you didn't."
  • McTeague buys a "white lawn tie" on Marcus's instruction and wears his best clothes.
  • The narrator observes: "No people have a keener eye for the amenities than those whose social position is not assured."
  • Example: McTeague's confusion at the ticket window (right vs. left, near vs. away from drums) shows his lack of cultural capital; he tries to follow a formula but cannot navigate the transaction smoothly.

😰 McTeague's ordeal

  • The theatre outing is described as "an ordeal. Never in his life had he been so perturbed, so horribly anxious."
  • He rehearses instructions "over and over," loses the tickets (they are under his hat sweatband), and becomes enraged at the ticket seller for perceived slights.
  • His outburst—"You can't make small of me"—reveals his insecurity about being looked down upon.
  • Don't confuse: McTeague's anger is not about the tickets themselves but about his fragile sense of dignity in an unfamiliar social setting.

🎪 The variety show and audience response

🎭 The performance

The excerpt describes a typical variety show with multiple acts:

  • A slapstick "act" featuring an intoxicated lodger repeatedly tripped and knocked down.
  • "Musical marvels" (minstrels playing unconventional instruments).
  • Acrobats, a sentimental singer, rapid-fire comedians, yodelers in Tyrolese costume, and a kinetoscope demonstration.

😂 Class-specific humor

  • McTeague "roared and shouted every time the lodger went down, slapping his knee, wagging his head."
  • Mrs. Sieppe "laughed immoderately, her huge fat body shaking like a mountain of jelly."
  • The humor is physical and broad; McTeague declares the musicians "artists" and is "stupefied with admiration."
  • Why this matters: The characters' tastes and responses mark them as working-class; their unironic enjoyment contrasts with the narrator's slightly condescending tone.

🎥 The kinetoscope

  • The kinetoscope (an early motion picture device) "fairly took their breaths away."
  • McTeague is "awe-struck": "Look at that horse move his head… Well, I never in all my life!"
  • Mrs. Sieppe insists "It's all a drick!" (trick) and "I'm too old to be fooled."
  • Example: The kinetoscope represents modernity and technological wonder, but Mrs. Sieppe's skepticism shows generational and class-based resistance to new forms of spectacle.

😣 Owgooste's distress

  • The child Owgooste is restless throughout, whining "Ma-ah, I want to go ho-ome."
  • He eventually suffers an unnamed "dreadful accident" (implied to be wetting himself) that ruins his "new Vauntleroy gostume."
  • His mother smacks him; "his utter wretchedness was complete."
  • Don't confuse: This is not comic relief but another example of helplessness—Owgooste, like the adults, is subject to forces (his own body, his mother's anger) he cannot control.

🎰 The lottery win as chance

💰 The announcement

  • Upon returning home, the group is met with the news: "Your lottery ticket has won five thousand dollars!"
  • Trina's first reaction is disbelief: "There is a mistake. There must be. Why—why should I win five thousand dollars?"

🎲 Chance, not merit

"After all, it was not a question of effort or merit on her part. Why should she suppose a mistake?"

  • The win is described as "this wonderful fillip of fortune striking in there like some chance-driven bolt."
  • The agent confirms: "I guess you're one of the lucky ones, Miss Sieppe."
  • Why this matters: The lottery win reinforces the naturalist worldview—outcomes are determined by chance, not character or virtue.

🎉 Spontaneous joy

  • Trina is "carried away with the joy of her good fortune, a natural, spontaneous joy—the gaiety of a child with a new and wonderful toy."
  • She cries, "Oh, I've won, I've won, I've won!" and claps her hands.
  • Marcus jokes, "Get married on it for one thing," and everyone laughs.
  • Don't confuse: Trina's joy is genuine but childlike; the text does not suggest she has earned or deserves the money—it simply happened to her, like the spell of love.

🧩 Naturalist themes summarized

🧩 Determinism

  • Characters are "the sport of chance" with "no voice in the matter."
  • Instinct, environment, and accident shape events, not individual will.

🧩 Class and social performance

  • The Polk Street residents anxiously perform respectability because their status is insecure.
  • Their cultural tastes (slapstick, variety shows) and social missteps (McTeague's ticket confusion) mark them as working-class.

🧩 Chance and fate

  • The lottery win is the clearest symbol: a life-changing event that arrives independent of effort, foreshadowing how fortune—good or bad—will continue to buffet the characters.
29

Ellen Glasgow

5.14 Ellen Glasgow

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

This excerpt from a naturalist novel dramatizes how sudden wealth—Trina's five-thousand-dollar lottery win—exposes the characters' underlying desires, resentments, and obsessions, particularly Marcus's bitter regret and Zerkow's pathological greed.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • The lottery win as catalyst: Trina's unexpected five-thousand-dollar prize triggers celebration but also reveals hidden tensions and character flaws.
  • Marcus's resentment: Though he gave up Trina to his friend McTeague, Marcus now bitterly regrets losing both the girl and the money that could have been his.
  • Zerkow's obsession with gold: The rag-picker's reaction to news of the win—and Maria's recurring story of lost gold plate—shows a pathological fixation on wealth.
  • Common confusion: The celebration appears joyful on the surface, but naturalist technique reveals darker undercurrents—greed, envy, and obsession—beneath social rituals.
  • Naturalist determinism: Characters are driven by forces (desire for money, social position, psychological compulsion) beyond their rational control.

🎉 The lottery win and its immediate effects

🎟️ Trina's sudden fortune

  • Trina Sieppe wins five thousand dollars in a lottery after buying a single ticket for one dollar.
  • The agent arrives to confirm: "Present your ticket at the local branch office… and you'll receive a check on our bank for five thousand dollars."
  • Her reaction is spontaneous, childlike joy: "Oh, I've won, I've won, I've won!" she cried, clapping her hands.
  • The win coincides with her engagement to McTeague, the dentist, creating a double celebration.

🍺 The impromptu celebration

  • The group gathers in McTeague's "Dental Parlors" for beer, tamales, and toasts.
  • The agent delivers a polished speech congratulating Trina and the engaged couple: "The company have dowered the prospective bride."
  • McTeague is forced to give a stammering, awkward speech: "I don' know what to say… I'm glad Trina's won the prize… you're all welcome, an' drink hearty."
  • The scene is chaotic and festive: empty beer bottles among dental instruments, the canary waking and chittering, tamale husks on the floor.
  • Don't confuse: The surface gaiety with genuine harmony—naturalist fiction often shows social rituals masking deeper conflicts.

😠 Marcus's hidden resentment

💔 Regret over giving up Trina

  • Marcus Schouler, McTeague's friend, had been courting Trina but stepped aside so McTeague could marry her ("because we were pals").
  • During the celebration, Marcus shows "strange moods of sullenness" and moments of being "singularly out of temper."
  • When alone in the dog hospital yard, he explodes: "You fool, you fool, Marcus Schouler! If you'd kept Trina you'd have had that money."

🤬 The cost of friendship

  • Marcus realizes he has "thrown away your chance in life—to give up the girl, yes—but… to throw five thousand dollars out of the window."
  • He curses himself for playing it "right into his hands" (McTeague's).
  • His internal monologue reveals the naturalist theme: social bonds (friendship, loyalty) clash with economic self-interest and desire.
  • Example: Marcus publicly toasts the couple and acts as master of ceremonies, but privately rages at his loss—illustrating the gap between social performance and inner reality.

🪙 Zerkow's pathological obsession with gold

🔴 The rag-picker's mania

Zerkow: a "red-headed Polish Jew," a rag-picker who buys Maria's stolen gold "tape" (dental gold).

  • When Maria tells him about Trina's five-thousand-dollar win, Zerkow experiences physical pain: "It was as though a knife had been run through the Jew; a spasm of an almost physical pain twisted his face."
  • He cries out: "Five thousand dollars… why couldn't it have come to me? … me who have worked for it, fought for it, starved for it, am dying for it every day."
  • His reaction is visceral, not rational—tears start to his eyes, his voice chokes.

🏺 Maria's story of the lost gold plate

  • Maria Macapa repeatedly tells Zerkow about a legendary service of gold plate from her past: "more than a hundred pieces, and every one of them gold."
  • She describes it in sensory detail: "bright as a little sun," "smooth and bright; oh, bright as a little sun," "sweeter'n any church bell" when struck.
  • Zerkow is addicted to this story: "Maria's recital had become a veritable mania with him."
  • He makes her repeat it multiple times, closing his eyes, trembling, imagining he can see and touch the gold.

🔄 The cycle of fantasy and torment

  • Zerkow's obsession follows a pattern: intense fantasy ("he fancied he could see that wonderful plate before him") followed by crushing disappointment ("then to start, to wake, to come down to the horrible reality").
  • He torments himself: "And you, you had it once… you had it once, all your own. Think of it, and now it's gone."
  • The excerpt shows his compulsion as beyond his control: "The sight of gold invariably sent a qualm all through him; try as he would, he could not repress it."
  • Don't confuse: Zerkow's desire with ordinary greed—this is portrayed as a psychological compulsion, almost an illness, fitting naturalism's interest in deterministic forces (heredity, environment, obsession).

👴👵 Old Grannis and Miss Baker's quiet romance

🤝 The shy introduction

  • Old Grannis and Miss Baker are elderly neighbors who have lived "side by side for years" but never been formally introduced.
  • Marcus forces the introduction: "Well, I thought you two people knew each other long ago."
  • Their reaction: "Like two little children they faced each other, awkward, constrained, tongue-tied with embarrassment."
  • They barely speak, but "for the first time their eyes met."

🧵 Their silent companionship

  • After the party, each returns to their room; they share a thin partition wall.
  • Miss Baker brews tea and rocks in her chair near the partition; Old Grannis sits on his side binding books.
  • "It was their tete-a-tete. Instinctively they felt each other's presence, felt each other's thought coming to them through the thin partition."

  • The narrator comments: "they were perfectly happy… enjoying after their fashion their little romance that had come so late into the lives of each."
  • Contrast: This gentle, unspoken connection stands in stark opposition to the greed and resentment shown by Marcus and Zerkow—suggesting different responses to desire and circumstance.

🎭 Naturalist themes and techniques

📉 Determinism and compulsion

CharacterCompulsion/ForceManifestation
MarcusRegret, envyCannot suppress bitterness despite choosing friendship
ZerkowGold obsessionPhysical pain and trembling at the sight or mention of gold
MariaRepetition of the gold storyTells the tale compulsively, as if under a spell
McTeagueInarticulate emotionStruggles to speak, driven by instinct rather than intellect
  • The excerpt emphasizes that characters are driven by forces they cannot fully control: Marcus's rage, Zerkow's mania, Maria's fixation.
  • Example: Zerkow "could not repress" his reaction to gold; Marcus's internal monologue shows him recognizing his own foolishness but unable to change his feelings.

🎨 Naturalist style: detail and irony

  • Sensory accumulation: The "Dental Parlors" are described with precise, unglamorous detail—"the smell of their tobacco mingling with the odors of ether, creosote, and stale bedding."
  • Ironic juxtaposition: A celebration of wealth and marriage takes place amid dental instruments, empty beer bottles, and tamale husks; the canary "chittered crossly."
  • Contrast between surface and depth: The party appears festive, but the narrator reveals Marcus's sullenness, Zerkow's torment, and the awkwardness of Old Grannis and Miss Baker.
  • Don't confuse: Naturalism's detailed realism with mere description—every detail serves to show characters as products of their environment and drives, not free agents.

💰 Money as a corrupting or revealing force

  • The lottery win does not simply bring happiness; it exposes latent conflicts and obsessions.
  • Marcus's friendship is revealed as conditional; Zerkow's existence is shown to revolve entirely around gold.
  • Even the agent's polished speech ("a man of the world… suave and easy. A diamond was on his little finger") hints at the commercial, transactional nature of social relations.
  • The excerpt suggests that sudden wealth does not elevate characters but rather intensifies their underlying natures—a key naturalist insight.
30

William Faulkner

5.15 William Faulkner

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

This excerpt from a naturalist novel (likely Frank Norris's McTeague) demonstrates how economic pressures, possessive instincts, and petty resentments corrode human relationships, revealing the deterministic forces that shape character and fate.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • Economic determinism: Characters' actions and conflicts are driven by money—Trina's hoarding instinct, Marcus's resentment over the $5,000, McTeague's fixation on the golden tooth sign.
  • Deteriorating friendship: Marcus's jealousy transforms from generous renunciation of Trina into bitter accusations of betrayal, culminating in violence (throwing a knife).
  • Trina's peasant economy: Her "instinct of a hardy and penurious mountain race" drives her to save obsessively, investing the lottery winnings rather than spending them, revealing inherited traits.
  • Symbolic materialism: The golden tooth represents McTeague's ambition and status anxiety; it temporarily displaces his anger at Marcus, showing how objects mediate emotional life.
  • Common confusion: The excerpt shows naturalism's determinism—characters are not simply greedy or violent by choice; their behavior is shaped by heredity (Trina's "peasant blood," her ancestor's wood-carving talent) and environment (economic scarcity, social competition).

💰 Economic forces and character motivation

💵 Trina's hoarding instinct

"Economy was her strong point. A good deal of peasant blood still ran undiluted in her veins, and she had all the instinct of a hardy and penurious mountain race—the instinct which saves without any thought, without idea of consequence—saving for the sake of saving, hoarding without knowing why."

  • Trina's behavior is presented as inherited, not learned: "peasant blood," "instinct," "mountain race."
  • She insists on investing the $5,000 lottery winnings at 6% interest (yielding $25/month) rather than spending the lump sum.
  • McTeague is disappointed—he imagined "lavish" spending, "red velvet carpets and continued feasting," reflecting his "old-time miner's idea of wealth easily gained and quickly spent."
  • Don't confuse: Trina is not simply frugal by personal choice; the text frames her economy as a biological/ancestral compulsion ("without knowing why").

🪙 The three income streams

The couple's financial security comes from:

SourceAmountSignificance
McTeague's dental practiceUnspecified, "fairly good"Professional income
Interest on $5,000 (invested with Uncle Oelbermann)$25/month (6%)Trina's lottery winnings
Trina's Noah's ark animals$3–4/weekInherited craft skill from "some worsted-leggined wood-carver of the Tyrol"
  • Trina's whittling is another hereditary trait: "some long-forgotten forefather of the sixteenth century… had handed down the talent… to reappear in this strangely distorted guise."
  • She cannot make the human figures (manikins) fast enough to compete with industrial lathes—naturalism's tension between craft and mechanization.

🎯 McTeague's golden tooth obsession

  • The dentist longs for a large golden tooth sign to display outside his office, a symbol of professional status and rivalry with another dentist ("that poser, that rider of bicycles").
  • He cannot afford it himself; Trina secretly buys it as a birthday gift using money from her $5,000.
  • When he receives it, his anger at Marcus evaporates: "What was Marcus Schouler's hatred to him, who had Trina's affection? What did he care about a broken pipe now that he had the tooth?"
  • Implication: Material objects mediate and displace emotional conflicts; the tooth becomes a substitute for human connection and self-worth.

🔪 Marcus's resentment and violence

😠 The transformation of friendship

  • Marcus had earlier "renounced" Trina, allowing McTeague to court her.
  • Now he bitterly regrets it: "I've been played for a sucker long enough… you've done me out of my girl and out of my money."
  • He demands repayment for trivial expenses (50 cents for the picnic, 50 cents for a hospital bed), escalating into accusations: "Where's my share, I'd like to know?"

Example: At the coffee-joint, Marcus suddenly asks McTeague to repay four bits (50 cents) for a picnic months earlier, then refuses the money when offered, shouting "I ain't no beggar."

🗡️ The knife-throwing incident

  • At Frenna's bar, Marcus (drunk on his fourth whiskey cocktail) erupts in fury over McTeague's pipe smoke.
  • He knocks the pipe from McTeague's hand, breaking it.
  • When McTeague rises, Marcus misinterprets a "vague motion" as a threat and throws his open jack-knife at McTeague's head; it narrowly misses and sticks in the wall.
  • The bystanders recognize the act as attempted murder: "Death had stooped there for an instant… a regular greaser trick."

Don't confuse: Marcus's violence is not purely rational revenge; the text emphasizes his drunkenness, his "natural combativeness," and the heat of the moment—deterministic triggers rather than calculated malice.

🚪 McTeague's delayed anger

  • McTeague is initially "puzzled and harassed," unable to understand Marcus's rage.
  • His anger only ignites when he sees his broken pipe on the floor: "At that sight his tardy wrath, ever lagging behind the original affront, suddenly blazed up."
  • He storms to Marcus's room and breaks down the locked door, but Marcus is not there.
  • Implication: McTeague's emotional responses are slow, physical, and tied to concrete objects (the pipe, the tooth)—he cannot process abstract betrayal quickly.

💑 Trina and McTeague's courtship rituals

🍫 The Friday lunches

  • Trina comes to the city every Friday, shops all morning, then meets McTeague for lunch in a private room at a small hotel.
  • She arrives "breathless," "flushed," excited by bargain-hunting: "dotted veiling," "Nottingham lace curtains for forty-nine cents."
  • They discuss domestic plans (marriage at the end of May, renting rooms from a bankrupt photographer) and finances.

Example: Trina shows McTeague her purchases and asks, "Do you think it looks pretty?" spreading veiling over her face—courtship blends romance with economic practicality.

🐻 Playful intimacy

  • Trina treats McTeague like "a little child playing with some gigantic, good-natured Saint Bernard."
  • She rearranges his hair, stretches his ears, parts his mustache, kisses his bald spot "to make the hair grow."
  • Their favorite game: Trina parts his mustache while McTeague suddenly snorts through his nose, making her shriek; "McTeague would bellow with laughter till his eyes watered."

Don't confuse: This tenderness contrasts sharply with the violence and resentment elsewhere in the excerpt—naturalism juxtaposes domestic affection with brutal economic and social forces.

🏛️ Naturalist themes and determinism

🧬 Heredity as fate

The excerpt repeatedly attributes behavior to inherited traits:

  • Trina's "peasant blood" and "instinct" for hoarding.
  • Her whittling skill from a "long-forgotten forefather" wood-carver.
  • McTeague's "old-time miner's idea of wealth" (his father's influence, implied).

Implication: Characters do not freely choose their values or actions; they are shaped by ancestry and environment.

🏙️ Environment and social pressure

  • The setting is urban, lower-middle-class San Francisco: Polk Street, cheap department stores, a corner grocery with a bar (Frenna's).
  • Economic scarcity drives conflict: Marcus resents the $5,000 he "might have had"; McTeague cannot afford the golden tooth without Trina's help.
  • Social competition: McTeague envies the other dentist; the golden tooth is a "flag of defiance."

🎭 Objects as symbols of inner life

  • The golden tooth: McTeague's ambition, professional identity, and need for validation; it "changed all that" when he received it, displacing anger.
  • The broken pipe: The concrete trigger for McTeague's rage, more immediate than the abstract betrayal.
  • The knife in the wall: Physical evidence of Marcus's murderous impulse, kept by Frenna as a "toad-stabber."

Example: The tooth is described as "tremendous, overpowering—the tooth of a gigantic fossil, golden and dazzling. Beside it everything seemed dwarfed. Even McTeague himself… shrank and dwindled in the presence of the monster."

⚖️ Determinism vs. agency

  • Characters believe they are acting freely (Marcus: "I've been played for a sucker"; Trina: "We must be sensible"), but the narrative frames their behavior as driven by instinct, heredity, and circumstance.
  • Common confusion: Naturalism does not deny that characters have thoughts or feelings; it argues that those thoughts and feelings are themselves determined by forces beyond conscious control.
31

5.16 Eudora Alice Welty

5.16 Eudora Alice Welty

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

This excerpt from Frank Norris's naturalist novel depicts McTeague and Trina's wedding day through a lens of material detail and social ritual, revealing how ordinary people navigate marriage amid economic anxieties and domestic chaos.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • The wedding as social performance: The ceremony and supper are elaborate productions involving multiple families, hired help, and careful attention to material objects and social roles.
  • Economic anxiety beneath celebration: Trina's fierce attachment to her $5,000 lottery winnings and the Sieppe family's meticulous planning for their move to Los Angeles underscore financial precariousness.
  • Naturalist attention to physical detail: The narrative dwells on sensory particulars—food, furnishings, bodily sensations—rather than inner emotional life.
  • Common confusion: The wedding feels simultaneously momentous and inadequate; Trina wonders "Was that all there was to it?" even as the ritual binds them for life.
  • Class and taste: The couple's new home is furnished with mass-produced, sentimental objects (chromolithographs, knitted tidies, imitation brass frames) that signal their social position.

🏠 The new household and its objects

🛋️ The three-room suite

The newlyweds rent the photographer's former rooms, consisting of:

  • Sitting-room / dining-room: Clean matting, bright rugs, knitted tidies on chair backs, a parlor melodeon (a Sieppe family gift).
  • Bedroom: Three-ply ingrain carpet with red and green flowers in yellow baskets on white ground; wallpaper featuring "hundreds and hundreds of tiny Japanese mandarins" helping ladies into junks under bamboo palms and storks.
  • Kitchen: Trina's pride—new range, porcelain-lined sink, copper boiler, "overpowering array of flashing tinware."

The rooms are "three in number—first, the sitting-room, which was also the dining-room; then the bedroom, and back of this the tiny kitchen."

Why this matters: The detailed inventory of furnishings establishes the couple's modest economic status and aesthetic taste. Everything is new, complete, and mass-produced—a ready-made domestic life.

🖼️ Decorative objects and taste

The sitting-room contains three pictures:

  • Two companion chromolithographs: "I'm Grandpa" (little boy with spectacles and pipe) and "I'm Grandma" (little girl knitting).
  • A large colored lithograph titled "Faith": two golden-haired girls in nightgowns praying, eyes rolled upward, framed in red plush mat and imitation beaten brass.

Don't confuse: These are not personal or original artworks but mass-produced sentimental images typical of lower-middle-class Victorian taste. The naturalist author catalogs them without overt judgment, letting the objects speak for themselves.

🎁 Wedding presents and social hierarchy

Gifts reveal the social network and economic disparities:

GiverGiftSignificance
Trina's parentsParlor melodeon, ice-water set, carving knife and fork with elk-horn handlesPractical household items
SelinaPainted view of Golden Gate on redwood slice (paperweight)Handmade, sentimental
Marcus SchoulerChatelaine watch of German silverExplicitly "to HER, and not to McTeague"—still claiming connection to Trina
Uncle OelbermannBox of toys + full case of Monopole champagneWealth and generosity; the champagne produces "the deepest impression"

Example: When Uncle Oelbermann's boxes arrive, McTeague is baffled by the toys until Trina, "scarlet to her hair," laughs behind her handkerchief—the toys are for future children, a fact that embarrasses her.

💰 Economic anxiety and Trina's $5,000

💵 Trina's attachment to her winnings

Trina won $5,000 in a lottery, and the money has become sacred to her:

  • She agreed to spend only $200 on household furnishings and her trousseau.
  • "She clung to this sum with a tenacity that was surprising; it had become for her a thing miraculous, a god-from-the-machine… she regarded it as something almost sacred and inviolable."
  • "Never, never should a penny of it be spent."

Why this matters: Trina's miserliness foreshadows future conflict. Her fierce possessiveness—"it's mine, every single penny of it"—reveals both economic insecurity and a psychological fixation.

🦷 The mystery of the golden tooth

McTeague has acquired a giant golden tooth as a professional sign (mentioned earlier in the excerpt). The narrative notes: "Did Trina pay for the golden tooth out of this two hundred? Later on, the dentist often asked her about it, but Trina invariably laughed in his face, declaring that it was her secret. McTeague never found out."

Don't confuse: This is not a minor detail but a signal of Trina's secretiveness and control over money, traits that will shape their marriage.

🚂 The Sieppe family's migration

Mr. Sieppe has bought a third interest in an upholstering business in Los Angeles; the entire family will move the day after the wedding.

  • The preparations are described in military terms: "Not Stanley penetrating for the first time into the Dark Continent, not Napoleon leading his army across the Alps, was more weighted with responsibility… than was Mr. Sieppe."
  • Trunks are lettered A, B, C; packages numbered; every detail calculated "to two places of decimals."
  • Even the dog's food is predetermined.

Example: The two systems—wedding preparation and moving preparation—"often clashed and tangled." Mrs. Sieppe is found helping Trina with her gown when she should be slicing chicken; Mr. Sieppe packs his wedding frock coat at the bottom of Trunk C.

💍 The wedding ceremony and its inadequacy

🎹 The ritual performance

The ceremony takes place in the sitting-room:

  • The minister stands behind a small table in the bay window.
  • Guests form a semi-circle: Uncle Oelbermann, Miss Baker, Marcus Schouler, Heise the harness-maker, Owgooste (a child in a Fauntleroy costume).
  • Selina plays the wedding march on the parlor melodeon.
  • Trina enters in white silk, orange blossoms, veil to the floor, on her father's arm; the twins walk ahead with enormous bouquets.

Physical details: When the couple kneels, "the dentist's knees thudded on the floor and he presented to view the soles of his shoes, painfully new and unworn, the leather still yellow, the brass nail heads still glittering."

🤔 The feeling of incompleteness

"All at once the ceremony was over before any one expected it. The guests kept their positions for a moment, eyeing one another, each fearing to make the first move, not quite certain as to whether or not everything were finished."

Trina and McTeague both feel "a certain inadequateness":

  • "Was that all there was to it? Did just those few muttered phrases make them man and wife?"
  • "It had been over in a few moments, but it had bound them for life."
  • "Was not the whole affair cursory, superficial? It was disappointing."

Why this matters: The naturalist perspective emphasizes the gap between the weight of the social/legal bond and the brevity of the ritual. The ceremony is both everything (legally binding for life) and nothing (a few muttered phrases).

🎭 Marcus Schouler's performance

Marcus, Trina's former suitor, plays a complex role:

  • He "stepped forward and, even before Mr. or Mrs. Sieppe, took Trina's hand. 'Let me be the first to congratulate Mrs. McTeague,' he said, feeling very noble and heroic."
  • He had earlier refused to be best man ("That was rubbing it in"), but he performs magnanimity at the ceremony.
  • He kisses Trina on the forehead "with an air of great gravity."

Don't confuse: Marcus's gestures are self-conscious performances of nobility, not genuine goodwill. The narrator's phrase "feeling very noble and heroic" undercuts his sincerity.

🍽️ The wedding supper as spectacle

🦆 The abundance of food

The supper is a marathon of consumption lasting two hours:

  • Oyster soup, sea bass, barracuda, gigantic roast goose stuffed with chestnuts, egg-plant, sweet potatoes ("yams"), calf's head in oil, lobster salad, rice pudding, strawberry ice cream, wine jelly, stewed prunes, coconuts, mixed nuts, raisins, fruit, tea, coffee, mineral waters, lemonade.
  • "For two hours the guests ate; their faces red, their elbows wide, the perspiration beading their foreheads."
  • "All around the table one saw the same incessant movement of jaws and heard the same uninterrupted sound of chewing."

Physical detail: "McTeague ate for the sake of eating, without choice; everything within reach of his hands found its way into his enormous mouth."

🍾 The champagne and McTeague's blunder

Uncle Oelbermann's champagne is opened with great ceremony:

  • "All at once there was a report like a pistol. The men started in their places. Mrs. Sieppe uttered a muffled shriek."
  • The waiter calls it "bubble-water," which delights the guests.
  • After the toast, McTeague exclaims: "That's the best beer I ever drank."

Why this matters: McTeague's mistake—calling champagne "beer"—provokes "a roar of laughter." Marcus especially finds it hilarious, "banging the table with his fist, laughing until his eyes watered," and keeps imitating McTeague throughout the meal. The blunder marks McTeague's social ignorance and becomes a source of ongoing mockery.

🌡️ Atmosphere and sensory overload

The room becomes oppressive:

  • "Soon the room became very warm, a faint moisture appeared upon the windows, the air was heavy with the smell of cooked food."
  • "The men, gorged with food, had unbuttoned their vests."
  • "McTeague's cheeks were distended, his eyes wide, his huge, salient jaw moved with a machine-like regularity."

Naturalist technique: The narrator focuses on bodily processes—chewing, sweating, breathing—rather than conversation or emotion. The wedding supper becomes a scene of animal consumption.

🤡 The waiter as comic relief

The hired waiter from a cheap restaurant is "a great joker":

  • He has "names of his own for different articles of food."
  • When he calls parsley "scenery," "Heise all but strangled himself over a mouthful of potato."
  • He calls champagne "bubble-water," which becomes a running joke.

Social detail: The waiter's humor and the guests' delight in it signal their class position—they are not accustomed to formal service or fine dining.

🎭 Social dynamics and silences

👴👵 Old Grannis and Miss Baker

Two elderly neighbors are present, and their interaction is marked by constraint:

  • When seating is arranged, Marcus takes the seat beside Selina that Old Grannis was approaching.
  • Only one chair remains—beside Miss Baker.
  • "Old Grannis hesitated, putting his hand to his chin. However, there was no escape. In great trepidation he sat down beside the retired dressmaker. Neither of them spoke. Old Grannis dared not move, but sat rigid, his eyes riveted on his empty soup plate."

Why this matters: The excerpt hints at a long-standing, unspoken attraction between Old Grannis and Miss Baker, adding a layer of pathos to the wedding celebration.

💼 Uncle Oelbermann's status

Uncle Oelbermann, the wholesale toy dealer, commands deference:

  • Marcus whispers to Heise: "Got thirty thousand dollars in the bank; has, for a fact."
  • Heise observes: "Don't have much to say."
  • Marcus replies: "No, no. That's his way; never opens his face."

Social hierarchy: Wealth confers status even without conversation. Uncle Oelbermann's silence is interpreted as dignified reserve, not rudeness.

🔪 The reconciliation with Marcus

The week before the wedding, Marcus and McTeague are reconciled after Marcus had thrown a knife at the dentist (mentioned earlier):

  • Mrs. Sieppe brings them together: "Now, you two fellers, don't be dot foolish. Schake hands und maig ut oop, soh."
  • Marcus mutters an apology; McTeague, "miserably embarrassed," mumbles "That's all right."
  • But Marcus refuses to be best man: "I'm friends with um all right, but I'll not stand up with um."

Don't confuse: The reconciliation is superficial, a social necessity for the wedding, not a genuine resolution of conflict.

32

The Open Boat

5.17 The Harlem Renaissance

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

Crane's "The Open Boat" depicts four shipwreck survivors struggling against an indifferent natural world that renders human notions of justice and control illusory, forcing them to confront their insignificance and mortality while finding solidarity in shared suffering.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • The indifferent universe: The sea and natural forces are portrayed as hostile or indifferent to human striving, suffering, and survival—there is no fairness or mercy in nature.
  • Human insignificance: The men are depicted as small, powerless dots on a vast ocean, unable to understand or control their fate despite desperate effort.
  • Limits of human agency: Free will and control over destiny are shown as illusions; the men cannot predict whether their struggle will end in survival or death.
  • Solidarity amid helplessness: While each man ultimately faces survival alone, they experience a "subtle brotherhood" forged by shared peril.
  • Common confusion: Naturalism vs. Realism—Naturalism pushes beyond Realism's "genteel" subjects to explore grittier, Darwinian environments where humans are at the mercy of forces beyond their comprehension.

🌊 The indifferent natural world

🌊 The sea as hostile and meaningless

The natural world in "The Open Boat" is characterized as indifferent or even hostile to human striving and suffering.

  • The waves are described as "wrongfully and barbarously abrupt and tall," yet this language reflects human projection—nature itself has no moral dimension.
  • The correspondent comes to realize that after fighting to reach shore, the waves may crash the dinghy on rocks, forcing the weakened men to swim through dangerous conditions.
  • Why it matters: Ideas such as justice, fairness, and mercy are revealed as human illusions in a Darwinian environment.
  • Example: The men may survive the open sea only to drown in the surf—nature does not reward effort or virtue.

🪶 The gulls as symbols of nature's indifference

  • The gulls are described as sitting "comfortably in groups" on the sea, "envied by some in the dingey, for the wrath of the sea was no more to them than it was to a covey of prairie chickens a thousand miles inland."
  • The birds' "unblinking scrutiny" with "black bead-like eyes" is "uncanny and sinister," yet they are simply animals going about their lives.
  • Don't confuse: The gulls are not malicious; their indifference underscores that nature has no concern for human survival.

🚣 Human powerlessness and insignificance

🚣 Small and at the mercy of forces beyond control

  • The dinghy is described as a "wee thing wallowing, miraculously, top-up, at the mercy of five oceans."
  • The men are "small insignificant dots on the vast and indifferent sea."
  • Each wave seems "the final outburst of the ocean, the last effort of the grim water," yet another always follows—"a singular disadvantage of the sea lies in the fact that after successfully surmounting one wave you discover that there is another behind it."
  • Implication: Human effort is dwarfed by the scale and relentlessness of natural forces.

🧭 Unable to understand or predict outcomes

  • The correspondent "watched the waves and wondered why he was there."
  • The captain asks, "Do you think we've got much of a show, now, boys?" and the men fall silent, unable to express optimism or despair—"the ethics of their condition was decidedly against any open suggestion of hopelessness."
  • They cannot know whether the wind will hold, whether they will reach shore, or whether the surf will kill them.
  • Example: The men see the lighthouse—a symbol of safety—but cannot tell if they will ever reach it.

🤝 Solidarity and isolation

🤝 Brotherhood forged by shared peril

"It would be difficult to describe the subtle brotherhood of men that was here established on the seas. No one said that it was so. No one mentioned it. But it dwelt in the boat, and each man felt it warm him."

  • The four men—captain, oiler, cook, correspondent—become "friends in a more curiously iron-bound degree than may be common."
  • This solidarity is unspoken and emerges from their shared vulnerability.
  • Why it matters: Human connection offers some comfort, even when it cannot change the outcome.

🏊 Ultimately alone in the struggle for survival

  • The excerpt notes that "once it swamps each man is alone in his struggle for survival."
  • After the dinghy capsizes, each man must swim to shore individually among dangerous rocks.
  • Don't confuse: The brotherhood is real, but it cannot override the Darwinian reality that survival is an individual fight.

📚 Naturalism as a literary movement

📚 Pushing beyond Realism

  • Crane and other Naturalist writers (Frank Norris, Jack London) took issue with Howellsian Realism as "too restrictive and genteel."
  • Under the influence of Darwin's ideas, Naturalism tackled "grittier subjects such as poverty, crime, violence, and other sociological ills."
  • Naturalist writers also explored "humans at odds with the natural world—vast oceans, deserts, and frozen tundra."

📚 Key themes in Naturalism

ThemeHow it appears in "The Open Boat"
Indifferent universeThe sea has no concern for the men's survival; waves and rocks threaten them without malice or mercy.
Limits of free willThe men cannot control whether they live or die; their fate depends on forces beyond their understanding.
Darwinian struggleEach man must fight for survival; nature selects without regard to human virtue or effort.
Humans as insignificantThe dinghy is a "wee thing" on a vast ocean; the men are powerless dots.

📚 Based on real experience

  • "The Open Boat" is based on a real-life ordeal that Crane endured off the coast of Florida.
  • This grounding in lived experience reinforces the Naturalist commitment to depicting harsh, unvarnished reality.
33

5.18 Zora Neale Hurston

5.18 Zora Neale Hurston

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

The excerpt provided contains no content about Zora Neale Hurston; instead, it is a passage from a naturalist literary work depicting four men struggling for survival in a small boat at sea.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • Content mismatch: The title indicates a section on Zora Neale Hurston, but the excerpt is from a different literary work (appears to be Stephen Crane's "The Open Boat").
  • Actual content: The passage depicts four men—a captain, oiler, cook, and correspondent—adrift in a dinghy after a shipwreck.
  • Literary period: The header labels this as "Naturalism (1890-1914)," a literary movement, not biographical or critical material about Hurston.
  • No substantive match: There is no discussion of Hurston's life, works, themes, or literary contributions in the provided text.

📄 What the excerpt actually contains

🌊 A survival narrative

The excerpt is a lengthy passage from a naturalist short story about shipwreck survivors.

  • Four men are rowing a small dinghy toward shore after their ship foundered.
  • The narrative focuses on their physical exhaustion, the indifference of nature, and their struggle to reach land.
  • The men spot a lighthouse, see people on shore, but no rescue comes.

🎭 Literary style and themes

The passage exhibits characteristics of literary naturalism:

  • Indifferent nature: The sea and fate are portrayed as uncaring forces; the correspondent reflects, "When it occurs to a man that nature does not regard him as important, and that she feels she would not maim the universe by disposing of him..."
  • Human endurance: The men row in shifts, suffer cold and exhaustion, and maintain a "subtle brotherhood" forged by shared peril.
  • Irony and absurdity: The men see people on shore waving, an omnibus, and a man revolving his coat, but no rescue boat arrives; they interpret these signals with frustration and dark humor.

⚠️ Note on content relevance

⚠️ No information about Zora Neale Hurston

  • The excerpt does not mention Hurston by name.
  • It contains no biographical details, critical analysis, or discussion of her novels, essays, or anthropological work.
  • The passage is a work of fiction, not scholarly or instructional material about an author.

📚 Possible explanation

  • This may be a formatting or extraction error in the source document.
  • The header "5.18 Zora Neale Hurston" does not correspond to the text that follows.
  • Students seeking information on Hurston should consult the correct section of the source material.
34

5.19 Nella Larsen

5.19 Nella Larsen

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

The excerpt provided does not contain substantive content about Nella Larsen; it consists entirely of narrative passages from Stephen Crane's "The Open Boat" and Jack London's "To Build a Fire," along with biographical information about Jack London and reading questions.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • The excerpt is labeled "5.19 Nella Larsen" but contains no material about Nella Larsen herself.
  • The text includes the final pages of Stephen Crane's naturalist story "The Open Boat," depicting men struggling to survive a shipwreck.
  • The excerpt provides a biography of Jack London (1876–1916) and the opening of his story "To Build a Fire."
  • Jack London's work exemplifies literary naturalism, focusing on survival struggles influenced by Darwin, Marx, and Nietzsche.
  • The excerpt does not provide any analysis, biography, or works related to Nella Larsen.

📄 Content mismatch

📄 What the excerpt contains

The source material is mislabeled. Instead of content about Nella Larsen, it provides:

  • Pages 313–317: The conclusion of Stephen Crane's "The Open Boat," showing four men (correspondent, cook, oiler Billie, and captain) attempting to reach shore after their boat capsizes; the oiler drowns, and the survivors reach land.
  • Pages 317–322: A biography of Jack London and the opening section of his story "To Build a Fire," in which an unnamed man and a dog travel through extreme cold in the Yukon.

🚫 Missing Nella Larsen material

  • No biographical information about Nella Larsen is present.
  • No discussion of her novels (Passing, Quicksand) or themes (racial identity, class, gender) appears.
  • No literary analysis or historical context for Larsen's work is included.

📖 Crane's "The Open Boat" (excerpt conclusion)

🌊 The shipwreck climax

The men in the dinghy decide to attempt landing through the surf:

  • The captain warns: "she is going to swamp sure"—they must work the boat in, then scramble for the beach when it swamps.
  • The oiler (Billie) rows; waves crash over the boat repeatedly.
  • On the third wave, the boat is swallowed and all four men tumble into the sea.

🏊 Struggle in the water

  • The correspondent reflects that the January water off Florida is colder than expected—"this fact was somehow… a proper reason for tears."
  • The oiler swims strongly ahead; the cook uses his life-preserver and an oar; the captain clings to the overturned boat.
  • The correspondent is caught in a current and cannot make progress toward shore, even though it is near: "Can it be possible?" he thinks about drowning.

💀 The oiler's death

  • A man on shore runs into the water, undressing as he goes, and helps drag the cook and correspondent to safety.
  • The captain waves the rescuer toward the correspondent.
  • The oiler, Billie, is found face-down in the shallows, drowned.
  • The land welcomes the survivors warmly, but for the oiler "the land's welcome… could only be the different and sinister hospitality of the grave."

🎭 Naturalist themes in Crane

  • Indifference of nature: The correspondent observes that nature "did not seem cruel… nor beneficent… But she was indifferent, flatly indifferent."
  • Arbitrary fate: The strongest swimmer (the oiler) dies; survival is not determined by merit or effort.
  • Human insignificance: The windmill on shore "represented… the serenity of nature amid the struggles of the individual."

🐺 Jack London biography and naturalism

🐺 London's life and influences

"We who are so very human are very animal." —Jack London

  • 1876–1916: Prolific American author; produced over 400 nonfiction works, 20 novels, and nearly 200 short stories.
  • Working-class background: Worked in mills, canneries, as an oyster pirate, and sailed; spent time in jail for vagrancy; went to the Yukon gold rush.
  • Intellectual influences: Friedrich Nietzsche (struggle of individuals vs. institutions), Charles Darwin (survival of the fittest), Karl Marx (class struggle).
  • Literary naturalism: Combined personal experience at "the bottom of the work force, in the arctic, and at sea" with these philosophical ideas.

📚 Major works and themes

  • Famous animal stories: The Call of the Wild (1903), White Fang (1906), "To Build a Fire" (1908).
  • Struggle for survival: London's naturalism centers on heredity, environment, and the limits of human control.
  • "To Build a Fire" revisions: Published a juvenile version in 1902 (protagonist named Tom Vincent, no dog, survives); the 1908 version (unnamed man, with dog) is "much more famous" and exemplifies naturalism more fully.

🔥 "To Build a Fire" opening (excerpt)

❄️ The setting and the man

  • An unnamed man leaves the main Yukon trail at 9 a.m. on an "exceedingly cold and grey" day with no sun.
  • He is a "chechaquo" (newcomer) experiencing his first winter; he is traveling alone except for a dog.
  • Lack of imagination: "The trouble with him was that he was without imagination… quick and alert in the things of life, but only in the things, and not in the significances."
  • He knows it is fifty degrees below zero, which "meant eighty odd degrees of frost"—but "it did not lead him to meditate upon his frailty as a creature of temperature."

🐕 The dog's instinct vs. the man's judgment

AspectThe manThe dog
KnowledgeRelies on thermometers, judgment, factsRelies on instinct, "a truer tale than was told to the man"
Response to coldThinks only of mittens, ear-flaps, practical measuresFeels "vague but menacing apprehension"; wants fire or shelter
AwarenessDoes not grasp the deeper danger"The brute had its instinct" and senses the threat
  • Temperature reality: It is actually seventy-five below zero (107 degrees of frost), far colder than the man estimates.
  • Foreshadowing: The dog's unease and the man's lack of imagination signal danger ahead.

🧊 Hidden dangers

  • Springs under the ice: Water flows beneath snow and ice; breaking through means wet feet, which "meant trouble and danger" in such cold.
  • The man must "stop and build a fire" to dry his feet if he gets wet—delay could be fatal.
  • The dog breaks through once; instinctively licks and bites the ice from its paws.
  • The man helps remove ice from the dog's feet but is "astonished at the swift numbness" in his exposed fingers after only a minute.

🥶 Naturalist elements in the opening

  • Environment as antagonist: The cold is an impersonal, overwhelming force; "the tremendous cold… made no impression on the man" because he lacks imagination.
  • Instinct vs. reason: The dog's animal instinct is more reliable than the man's rational judgment.
  • Determinism: The man's lack of imagination and the extreme environment set the stage for inevitable conflict.
  • No moral dimension: Nature is neither cruel nor kind; survival depends on adaptation, not virtue.

Note: This excerpt does not contain any content related to Nella Larsen. To study Nella Larsen's work and significance, a different source is required.

35

5.20 Langston Hughes

5.20 Langston Hughes

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

The excerpt provided does not contain substantive content about Langston Hughes; it consists entirely of a passage from Jack London's naturalist fiction (describing a man freezing in the Yukon), followed by review questions, chapter key terms, and learning outcomes for a different chapter on the turn of the twentieth century.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • The excerpt does not discuss Langston Hughes or his work.
  • The main content is a lengthy passage from Jack London's survival narrative set in extreme cold.
  • The excerpt includes pedagogical material (review questions, key terms, learning outcomes) unrelated to the stated title.
  • No biographical, literary, or thematic information about Langston Hughes is present in the source text.

📄 Content mismatch

📄 What the excerpt contains

The source text is divided into three parts:

  1. A narrative passage: A detailed scene from Jack London's naturalist fiction depicting a man and a dog in the Yukon wilderness facing life-threatening cold.
  2. Review questions: Three questions about London's imagery, the man's struggle, and the contrast between the man and the dog.
  3. Chapter metadata: Key terms (Charles Darwin, Émile Zola, Frank Norris, etc.), learning outcomes, and a chapter introduction about American literature from 1893–1914.

🚫 What is missing

  • No mention of Langston Hughes.
  • No discussion of Hughes's poetry, themes, or contributions to the Harlem Renaissance.
  • No biographical details or literary analysis related to Hughes.

🔍 Why this matters

🔍 Possible explanations

  • The excerpt may have been copied from the wrong section of a textbook.
  • The title "5.20 Langston Hughes" does not correspond to the content provided.
  • The passage about the man freezing in the Yukon is characteristic of Jack London's naturalist style, not Langston Hughes's work.

🔍 What to do

If you are studying Langston Hughes, you will need to locate the correct source material. The provided excerpt cannot support review notes on Hughes because it contains no relevant information.

36

5.21 Countee Cullen

5.21 Countee Cullen

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

The excerpt illustrates naturalism's core claim that human survival depends on recognizing environmental forces and instinctual knowledge, contrasting the man's overconfident rationality with the dog's inherited wisdom about extreme cold.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • Instinct vs. judgment: the dog obeys "mysterious prompting" from instinct; the man relies on conscious judgment and advice, but dismisses warnings.
  • Inherited knowledge: the dog's ancestry knew "real cold" and passed down survival knowledge; the man's generations were "ignorant of cold."
  • Human overconfidence: the man laughs at the old-timer's advice, believes "any man who was a man could travel alone," and underestimates nature's power.
  • Common confusion: the man mistakes his ability to build one fire for mastery over the cold, not realizing that a single mistake (building under the tree) can be fatal.
  • Naturalism's determinism: the text emphasizes forces beyond human control—the cold "smote" the man, his blood "recoiled," and the avalanche of snow "descended without warning."

🐾 Instinct versus human judgment

🐾 The dog's instinctual knowledge

"This was a matter of instinct. To permit the ice to remain would mean sore feet. It did not know this. It merely obeyed the mysterious prompting that arose from the deep crypts of its being."

  • The dog does not reason or plan; it acts automatically to survive.
  • The excerpt contrasts "mysterious prompting" (instinct) with conscious knowing.
  • The dog's behavior is described as arising from "the deep crypts of its being"—something ancient and embedded.

🧠 The man's reliance on judgment

  • "But the man knew, having achieved a judgment on the subject"—he depends on learned knowledge and advice.
  • He remembers the old-timer's warning but initially laughed at it: "he had laughed at him at the time!"
  • The man believes rational thought and willpower are enough: "All a man had to do was to keep his head, and he was all right."

⚠️ Don't confuse

  • The man knows facts (e.g., wet feet must be dried), but knowledge alone does not guarantee survival.
  • The dog does not "know" in a conscious sense, yet its instinct is more reliable in this environment.

🧬 Inherited knowledge and ancestry

🧬 The dog's ancestral memory

"Possibly all the generations of his ancestry had been ignorant of cold, of real cold, of cold one hundred and seven degrees below freezing-point. But the dog knew; all its ancestry knew, and it had inherited the knowledge."

  • The dog's survival knowledge is inherited, not learned individually.
  • The text emphasizes "all its ancestry knew"—generations of experience encoded in instinct.
  • The dog understands "it was not good to walk abroad in such fearful cold" and knows "it was the time to lie snug in a hole in the snow."

🧑 The man's lack of ancestral preparation

  • The man's ancestors were "ignorant of cold, of real cold"—his lineage did not evolve in this extreme environment.
  • He lacks the inherited instincts that would protect him.
  • Example: the man does not instinctively sense danger the way the dog does; he must rely on second-hand advice.

🔍 Why ancestry matters in naturalism

  • Naturalism often portrays humans as shaped by heredity and environment.
  • The excerpt shows that inherited traits (the dog's instinct) can be more powerful than individual intelligence (the man's judgment).

❄️ The cold as an overwhelming force

❄️ Physical effects of extreme cold

  • Numbness strikes "swiftly": "he was astonished at the swift numbness that smote them."
  • Sensation disappears rapidly: "Already all sensation had gone out of his feet."
  • The cold is described as an active agent: "The cold of space smote the unprotected tip of the planet."

🩸 The body's involuntary response

"The blood of his body recoiled before it. The blood was alive, like the dog, and like the dog it wanted to hide away and cover itself up from the fearful cold."

  • The man's blood is personified as a living thing with its own survival instinct.
  • When he stops moving, "the action of the pump eased down" and blood retreats from extremities.
  • The body prioritizes core survival over fingers and toes—an automatic, uncontrollable process.

🌌 "The cold of space"

  • The text repeatedly uses this phrase to emphasize the cold's cosmic, impersonal scale.
  • "The bulge of the earth intervened between it and Henderson Creek"—the sun cannot reach him.
  • The cold is not a local weather event but a fundamental condition of the universe pressing down on "the unprotected tip of the planet."

🔥 Fire-building and the illusion of control

🔥 The man's confidence in his skill

  • He successfully builds a fire after wetting his feet: "The fire was a success. He was safe."
  • He dismisses the old-timer's warning: "Those oldtimers were rather womanish, some of them, he thought."
  • He believes individual competence is enough: "Any man who was a man could travel alone."

❌ The fatal mistake

"He should not have built the fire under the spruce tree. He should have built it in the open. But it had been easier to pull the twigs from the brush and drop them directly on the fire."

  • The man chooses convenience over caution.
  • Each twig he pulls causes "a slight agitation to the tree—an imperceptible agitation, so far as he was concerned."
  • The avalanche of snow is triggered by his own actions but is "imperceptible" to him—he cannot sense the danger.

🌨️ The avalanche as naturalistic determinism

  • "High up in the tree one bough capsized its load of snow. This fell on the boughs beneath, capsizing them. This process continued, spreading out and involving the whole tree."
  • The disaster unfolds mechanically, like a chain reaction.
  • "It descended without warning upon the man and the fire, and the fire was blotted out!"
  • The man is "shocked. It was as though he had just heard his own sentence of death."

🔍 Don't confuse

  • The man's ability to build one fire does not mean he has mastered the environment.
  • Naturalism emphasizes that a single mistake in a hostile environment can be irreversible.

🐕 The dog's apprehension and the man's isolation

🐕 The dog's reluctance

  • "The dog was disappointed and yearned back toward the fire. This man did not know cold."
  • The dog senses danger but cannot communicate: "the dog made no effort to communicate its apprehension to the man."
  • Why? "It was not concerned in the welfare of the man; it was for its own sake that it yearned back toward the fire."

🔗 The relationship between man and dog

"There was keen intimacy between the dog and the man. The one was the toilslave of the other, and the only caresses it had ever received were the caresses of the whip-lash and of harsh and menacing throat-sounds that threatened the whip-lash."

  • The relationship is based on domination, not mutual care.
  • The dog obeys out of fear: "the man whistled, and spoke to it with the sound of whip-lashes, and the dog swung in at the man's heels."
  • The dog's superior instinct is ignored because the man does not listen to or understand it.

🧑‍🤝‍🧑 The value of a trail-mate

  • After the fire is destroyed, the man realizes: "Perhaps the old-timer on Sulphur Creek was right. If he had only had a trail-mate he would have been in no danger now."
  • A companion could have built a second fire or warned him about the tree.
  • The man's isolation is both physical (traveling alone) and intellectual (dismissing advice).

📊 Naturalism's worldview in the excerpt

Naturalistic elementHow the excerpt illustrates it
DeterminismThe cold, the avalanche, and the body's responses are mechanical and inevitable.
HeredityThe dog's inherited instincts vs. the man's lack of ancestral preparation.
Environment as forceThe cold is an overwhelming, impersonal power ("the cold of space").
Human limitsThe man's rationality and willpower are insufficient; he cannot control his body's numbness or foresee the avalanche.
Survival of the fittestThe dog's instincts are better adapted to the environment than the man's judgment.

🧩 Why the man fails

  • He underestimates nature: "That showed one must not be too sure of things."
  • He overestimates human capability: "Any man who was a man could travel alone."
  • He ignores inherited wisdom (the old-timer's advice) and instinctual warnings (the dog's reluctance).
  • He makes a small, imperceptible mistake (building under the tree) that triggers a catastrophic chain reaction.

🔍 The naturalist lesson

  • Individual intelligence and effort are not enough when facing forces shaped by heredity, environment, and chance.
  • The text does not moralize; it presents the man's death as a natural consequence of his mismatch with the environment.
37

5.22 Jean Toomer

5.22 Jean Toomer

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

The excerpt depicts a man's desperate struggle to rebuild a fire after snow extinguishes his first attempt, illustrating the fatal consequences of losing sensation in his extremities and the growing disconnect between his will and his frozen body.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • The disaster: the man builds his fire under a spruce tree; pulling twigs shakes snow loose, which cascades down and buries the fire completely.
  • Progressive loss of control: numbness spreads from fingers to hands, making it impossible to grasp matches, pick up fuel, or execute fine motor tasks.
  • Desperation escalates: after failing to light a second fire with individual matches, he ignites seventy at once, burning his own hands; when that fire also fails, he tries to kill the dog for warmth but cannot grip a knife or throttle it.
  • Common confusion: the man's will remains intact (he plans, reasons, stays calm), but his body no longer obeys—"the wires were drawn, and the fingers did not obey."
  • Naturalist theme: the environment and physiology overpower human intention; the dog's instinct and natural fur contrast sharply with the man's vulnerability.

❄️ The first fire's destruction

🌲 Why the fire was lost

  • The man built the fire under a spruce tree for convenience—easier to pull twigs from the brush and drop them directly onto the flames.
  • Each tug on a twig communicated a slight vibration to the tree, imperceptible to the man but enough to disturb the snow-laden boughs.
  • One high bough capsized its load, triggering a chain reaction: snow fell onto lower boughs, which capsized in turn, creating an avalanche that buried the fire.

"Where it had burned was a mantle of fresh and disordered snow."

🧠 The man's reaction

  • He is shocked, as though hearing "his own sentence of death."
  • He recalls the old-timer on Sulphur Creek: "If he had only had a trail-mate he would have been in no danger now."
  • He resolves to build a second fire, this time in the open where no tree can threaten it, though he knows he will likely lose toes even if he succeeds.

Don't confuse: The man does not panic immediately; he remains methodical and calm, thinking through the steps—his mental faculties are still sharp.

🔥 The second fire attempt

🖐️ Gathering fuel with numb hands

  • The man cannot bring his fingers together to pull out individual twigs, so he gathers fuel by the handful.
  • This method collects rotten twigs and green moss along with dry material—undesirable, but "it was the best he could do."
  • He works methodically, even collecting larger branches for later use.

Example: He knows birch-bark is in his pocket and can hear it rustle, but he cannot feel or grasp it with his fingers.

🐕 The dog's perspective

  • The dog sits and watches "with a certain yearning wistfulness," looking upon the man as "the fire-provider."
  • Later, the man feels "a great surge of envy" toward the dog, which is "warm and secure in its natural covering."

Key contrast: The dog's instincts and fur protect it; the man's body is failing despite his intelligence and planning.

🔥 Lighting the matches

🧤 First match attempt: one at a time

  • The man tries to separate one match from the bunch, but the whole bundle falls into the snow.
  • His "dead fingers could neither touch nor clutch."
  • He watches with his eyes "in place of that of touch," willing his fingers to close, but "the wires were drawn, and the fingers did not obey."

"He willed to close them, for the wires were drawn, and the fingers did not obey."

  • He finally gets one match into his teeth, scratches it on his leg twenty times, and lights it—but the burning sulfur makes him cough, and the match falls into the snow.

🔥 Second match attempt: seventy at once

  • In "controlled despair," he recalls the old-timer's advice: "after fifty below, a man should travel with a partner."
  • He removes both mittens with his teeth, presses the entire bunch of matches between the heels of his hands, and scratches them along his leg.
  • Seventy matches flare at once; he holds them to the birch-bark while his flesh burns.

"His flesh was burning. He could smell it. Deep down below the surface he could feel it. The sensation developed into pain that grew acute."

  • He endures the pain as long as possible, but his burning hands absorb most of the flame, preventing the bark from lighting quickly.
  • When he finally jerks his hands apart, the birch-bark catches fire.

💀 The second fire's failure

🌿 Disrupting the nucleus

  • The man lays dry grasses and tiny twigs on the flame, biting off pieces of green moss with his teeth.
  • Blood withdrawal from his extremities makes him shiver uncontrollably.
  • A large piece of green moss falls onto the fire; he tries to poke it out, but his shivering makes him "poke too far," disrupting "the nucleus of the little fire."
  • The burning grasses and twigs scatter; despite his effort, "his shivering got away with him," and each twig "gushed a puff of smoke and went out."

"The fire-provider had failed."

Don't confuse: The man's failure is not due to lack of knowledge or effort—his body's involuntary shivering overrides his careful intentions.

🐺 The dog and the final realization

🔪 The wild idea

  • The man remembers a tale of someone who killed a steer in a blizzard and crawled inside the carcass for warmth.
  • He plans to kill the dog and bury his hands in its warm body until numbness subsides, then build another fire.
  • He calls the dog, but "a strange note of fear" in his voice frightens the animal, whose "suspicious nature sensed danger."

🤲 Inability to kill

  • The man crawls toward the dog on hands and knees; the unusual posture excites more suspicion, and the dog sidles away.
  • When the dog finally comes close, the man's arms flash out, but he discovers "his hands could not clutch, that there was neither bend nor feeling in the fingers."
  • He encircles the dog's body with his arms but realizes "he could not kill the dog. There was no way to do it."

"With his helpless hands he could neither draw nor hold his sheath-knife nor throttle the animal."

  • He releases the dog, which runs forty feet away and surveys him "curiously, with ears sharply pricked forward."

👀 Looking for his hands

  • The man looks down at his hands "in order to locate them, and found them hanging on the ends of his arms."
  • "It struck him as curious that one should have to use his eyes in order to find out where his hands were."

Key insight: The man's body has become alien to him—he must rely on vision because proprioception (the sense of where his limbs are) has vanished along with tactile sensation.

📊 Summary: will vs. body

AspectWhat remains intactWhat is lost
Mental facultiesPlanning, reasoning, memory, calmness
Voluntary controlArm movement (gross motor)Fine motor control, grip, finger movement
SensationVision, smell (burning flesh), pain (deep, delayed)Touch, proprioception, surface feeling
OutcomeThe man knows what to do and tries to execute itHis body cannot obey his will; "the wires were drawn"

Naturalist implication: Human intelligence and determination are powerless against the physical realities of extreme cold; the environment dictates survival, not willpower.

38

6.3 Southern Literary Renaissance - Second Wave (1945-1965)

6.3 Southern Literary Renaissance - Second Wave (1945-1965)

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

The excerpt provided does not contain substantive content about the Southern Literary Renaissance Second Wave; instead, it presents material from the turn of the twentieth century (1893-1914), including Jack London's naturalist fiction, an introduction to early modernism, and excerpts from Booker T. Washington's autobiography.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • The excerpt does not match the title; it covers turn-of-the-century American literature (1893-1914), not the 1945-1965 Southern Literary Renaissance.
  • The material includes a passage from Jack London's naturalist fiction depicting a man freezing to death in the Yukon.
  • The excerpt introduces the period 1893-1914 as a time of rapid immigration, urbanization, and the growth of African-American literary culture.
  • Booker T. Washington's Up From Slavery (1901) is presented as a key African-American autobiography that took a conciliatory tone toward segregation.
  • Common confusion: The excerpt mixes literary periods—naturalism and early modernism (pre-1914) are not part of the post-WWII Southern Literary Renaissance.

📚 Content mismatch and actual material

📚 What the excerpt actually covers

The provided text does not address the Southern Literary Renaissance Second Wave (1945-1965). Instead, it contains:

  • A closing passage from a Jack London story (likely "To Build a Fire") showing a dog recognizing the scent of death and leaving a frozen man.
  • Reading questions about London's Yukon imagery and naturalism.
  • A chapter introduction to "Turn of the Twentieth Century and the Growth of Modernism (1893-1914)."
  • Biographical and textual excerpts from Booker T. Washington's Up From Slavery.

🚫 Why this is not Southern Literary Renaissance material

  • Time period: The excerpt covers 1893-1914; the Southern Literary Renaissance Second Wave refers to 1945-1965.
  • Geography and themes: The excerpt discusses naturalism in the Yukon, Western fiction, and African-American autobiography—not the post-WWII Southern writers (e.g., Flannery O'Connor, Walker Percy, Eudora Welty).
  • Literary movements: The excerpt focuses on naturalism and early modernism, not the Southern Gothic or post-war Southern literature.

🐺 Jack London naturalist passage

🐺 The dog and the frozen man

The excerpt from London's story depicts a dog waiting for a man to build a fire in the snow:

  • The dog has never seen a man sit in the snow without making a fire.
  • As twilight comes, the dog whines and shifts, eager for warmth.
  • Eventually, the dog creeps close and catches "the scent of death."
  • The dog bristles, backs away, howls under the stars, and trots back toward camp "where were the other food-providers and fire-providers."

🧊 Naturalist themes

The reading questions highlight:

  • Imagery and environment: Does the Yukon setting suggest humans belong there?
  • Man vs. nature: The man is "struggling against" the cold by venturing out with only a dog.
  • Contrast: London invites readers to compare the "unnamed man" with the "proper wolf-dog"—showing their different relationships to the environment.

Example: The dog's instinct to leave the dead man and return to camp illustrates naturalism's emphasis on survival instinct over sentiment.

🏙️ Turn of the twentieth century (1893-1914)

🏙️ Historical context

The introduction describes sweeping changes between the 1893 Chicago World's Fair and the outbreak of World War I in 1914:

  • Immigration and urbanization: Unprecedented immigration changed the American landscape; Northern cities strained to serve "millions of residents in thousands of languages."
  • Population milestones: New York City exceeded five million; the U.S. total topped one hundred million by 1915.
  • Western expansion: Migration filled the plains and prairies, creating a "clash of cultures" with ongoing political repercussions.
  • European empires: Ancient monarchies and empires collapsed; Queen Victoria's death in 1901 marked the end of an era.

📖 Literary landscape

The excerpt notes:

  • F. Scott Fitzgerald, William Faulkner, and Ernest Hemingway were born within three years of each other and would "reshape the American literary landscape."
  • Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Kate Chopin, Edith Wharton, and Willa Cather were writing but had not yet received full recognition.
  • Mark Twain remained "the most famous author in the country."

Don't confuse: The excerpt acknowledges these major authors but does not include their work; instead, it focuses on African-American autobiography and Western fiction.

📘 African-American literary culture

📘 Booker T. Washington and W. E. B. Du Bois

The introduction highlights two key works:

  • Booker T. Washington's Up From Slavery (1901): Continues the African-American autobiography tradition (Equiano, Douglass) and serves as a "political and social manifesto."
  • W. E. B. Du Bois's The Souls of Black Folk (1903): Also autobiography and manifesto; "often considered one of the earliest works in the field of sociology."

Both authors wrote in the wake of Plessy v. Ferguson (1896), advocating that schools and services for African Americans were "not equal to those provided to the rest of the population."

📘 Washington's approach

Unlike Frederick Douglass's Narrative, Washington "struck a more conciliatory tone aimed at lifting African Americans out of poverty in exchange for lesser political and individual autonomy."

  • Washington did not criticize Plessy v. Ferguson's "separate but equal" doctrine.
  • He "sought to work within the law's segregationist restrictions."
  • His autobiography showcased "the industry and integrity of all African Americans rather than to demonize his former owners."

Example: Washington's 1895 Atlanta Exposition Address (reprinted in Chapter 14 of Up From Slavery) received "startlingly positive reception by a largely white audience."

🔍 Washington vs. Du Bois

The excerpt notes:

  • Washington's conciliatory stance contrasted with Du Bois's more critical approach.
  • "The debates between Du Bois and Washington formed the backdrop for the struggle over African-American art and literature during the Harlem Renaissance."

Don't confuse: Washington's pragmatism with acceptance of inequality—he sought to "work within" segregation to achieve economic progress, not to endorse it as just.

🤠 Western fiction

🤠 Zane Grey's Riders of the Purple Sage (1912)

The excerpt describes Grey's novel as defining "a literary genre and an American ideal":

  • Owen Wister's The Virginian (1902) is "often considered the first Western," but its plot is "a fairly typical romance that is set in the West."
  • Grey offers "a new type of character: a rough, independent, introspective cowboy with a pragmatically American, and personal, code of conduct."

Example: Grey's cowboy is not just a romantic hero in a Western setting but embodies a distinctly American individualism and moral code.

📖 Booker T. Washington biography excerpt

📖 Early life as a slave

The excerpt from Up From Slavery Chapter I describes Washington's birth and childhood:

  • Born a slave in Franklin County, Virginia, around 1858 or 1859; uncertain of exact date or place.
  • Lived in a log cabin "about fourteen by sixteen feet square" with his mother, brother, and sister until emancipation.
  • The cabin served as both living quarters and plantation kitchen (his mother was the cook).

📖 Conditions of slavery

Washington describes the cabin in detail:

  • No glass windows, only openings that let in light and cold air.
  • A poorly hung door with large cracks.
  • A "cat-hole" (seven-by-eight-inch opening) for cats to pass through.
  • No wooden floor; "the naked earth being used as a floor."
  • A large hole in the center for storing sweet potatoes in winter.

Example: Washington recalls stealing and roasting potatoes from the storage hole—a small pleasure in harsh conditions.

📖 Family and ancestry

  • Washington knew "almost nothing" of his ancestry beyond his mother.
  • He heard "whispered conversations" about ancestors suffering in the "middle passage of the slave ship."
  • His mother "attracted the attention of a purchaser who was afterward my owner and hers."
  • Of his father, Washington knew even less: "I have heard reports to the effect that he was a white man who lived on one of the near-by plantations."
  • Washington does not "find especial fault with him," calling his father "simply another unfortunate victim of the institution."

Don't confuse: Washington's lack of bitterness with approval of slavery—he frames his father's absence as a product of the "institution which the Nation unhappily had engrafted upon it."

📖 Tone and purpose

The excerpt notes Washington wrote to:

  • "Showcase the industry and integrity of all African Americans."
  • Give "examples not only of the horrors of slavery but also of harmonious and honorable race relations."
  • Avoid demonizing former owners or celebrating personal accomplishments.

Example: Washington describes his owners as "not especially cruel, for they were not, as compared with many others"—a conciliatory framing that contrasts with Douglass's more confrontational narrative.

39

6.4 Tennessee Williams

6.4 Tennessee Williams

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

This excerpt describes the harsh material conditions and emotional deprivations of slavery through the lived experience of a child on a Virginia plantation, emphasizing how the institution victimized both enslaved people and their families while also showing how enslaved communities maintained awareness of the political struggle for their freedom.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • Living conditions: the cabin lacked basic comforts—no glass windows, dirt floors, inadequate heating and cooling, and served multiple functions including as the plantation kitchen.
  • Family disruption: the narrator's mother had almost no time for childcare, snatching moments before dawn and after dark; the family never ate a civilized meal together.
  • Child labor: even young children worked constantly—cleaning yards, carrying water, taking corn to the mill—with no time devoted to play or schooling.
  • Information networks: despite being "completely ignorant" of books and newspapers, enslaved people kept themselves "accurately and completely informed" about national events through the "grape-vine telegraph."
  • Common confusion: the narrator distinguishes between theft under normal circumstances (which he would condemn) and his mother taking food to feed her children under slavery (which he refuses to call theft because she was "simply a victim of the system").

🏚️ Material deprivation and living conditions

🏚️ The cabin structure

The cabin was not only the living-place but also used as the kitchen for the plantation.

  • No proper enclosures: openings instead of glass windows let in cold winter air; the door had uncertain hinges, large cracks, and was too small.
  • The "cat-hole": a seven-by-eight-inch square opening in the lower corner, common in Virginia cabins, supposedly for cats to pass through—though the narrator notes the cabin had "at least a half-dozen other places" that would have worked.
  • Dirt floor with potato storage: the center had a large deep hole covered with boards for storing sweet potatoes in winter; the narrator recalls sneaking potatoes to roast.

🔥 Cooking and temperature extremes

  • All cooking for both white owners and enslaved people was done over an open fireplace, mostly in pots and "skillets"—no cooking-stove existed.
  • The poorly built cabin caused suffering from cold in winter; the open fireplace made summer "equally trying" with heat.
  • Example: the mother cooked late at night over this fireplace to feed her children after a full day's work.

🛏️ Sleeping arrangements

  • The narrator cannot remember sleeping in a bed until after the Emancipation Proclamation.
  • Three children—John (older brother), Amanda (sister), and the narrator—slept on "a pallet on the dirt floor, or, to be more correct, we slept in and on a bundle of filthy rags laid upon the dirt floor."

👨‍👩‍👧‍👦 Family life under slavery

👨‍👩‍👧‍👦 Fragmented parenting

  • The narrator's mother "had little time in which to give attention to the training of her children during the day."
  • She "snatched a few moments for our care in the early morning before her work began, and at night after the day's work was done."
  • Earliest recollection: mother cooking a chicken late at night and waking her children to feed them.

🍗 The chicken incident and moral judgment

  • The narrator does not know how or where his mother got the chicken, presuming "it was procured from our owner's farm."
  • He acknowledges: "Some people may call this theft. If such a thing were to happen now, I should condemn it as theft myself."
  • But: "taking place at the time it did, and for the reason that it did, no one could ever make me believe that my mother was guilty of thieving. She was simply a victim of the system of slavery."
  • Don't confuse: the narrator distinguishes between actions under slavery (where normal moral categories don't apply because people are "victims of the system") and the same actions under freedom.

🍽️ No family meals

  • "I cannot remember a single instance during my childhood or early boyhood when our entire family sat down to the table together, and God's blessing was asked, and the family ate a meal in a civilized manner."
  • Meals were "gotten by the children very much as dumb animals get theirs"—a piece of bread here, a scrap of meat there, a cup of milk at one time, potatoes at another.
  • Sometimes the family ate out of the skillet or pot; others ate from a tin plate held on the knees, "often using nothing but the hands with which to hold the food."

👦 Child labor and deprivation of childhood

👦 Constant work from earliest memory

  • "Until that question was asked it had never occurred to me that there was no period of my life that was devoted to play."
  • "From the time that I can remember anything, almost every day of my life has been occupied in some kind of labour."
  • The narrator reflects: "I think I would now be a more useful man if I had had time for sports."

🌽 The mill trips

  • Even when "not large enough to be of much service," the narrator cleaned yards, carried water to field workers, and took corn to the mill once a week (about three miles away).
  • The ordeal: a heavy bag of corn was thrown across a horse's back, divided evenly on each side, but "almost without exception" the corn would shift, become unbalanced, and fall off—often with the narrator falling too.
  • Not strong enough to reload, he would wait "sometimes for many hours" for a chance passer-by to help, "usually spent in crying."
  • The delay made him late reaching the mill and getting home "far into the night."
  • Added fear: the lonely road led through dense forests said to be full of army deserters; he had been told "the first thing a deserter did to a Negro boy when he found him alone was to cut off his ears."
  • Consequence: being late meant "a severe scolding or a flogging."

📚 No schooling, only longing

  • "I had no schooling whatever while I was a slave."
  • He remembers going to the schoolhouse door with a young mistress to carry her books.
  • "The picture of several dozen boys and girls in a schoolroom engaged in study made a deep impression upon me, and I had the feeling that to get into a schoolhouse and study in this way would be about the same as getting into paradise."

📡 The "grape-vine telegraph" and political awareness

📡 How enslaved people stayed informed

The "grape-vine telegraph": the method by which enslaved people kept themselves informed of national events.

  • The narrator "never been able to understand how the slaves throughout the South, completely ignorant as were the masses so far as books or newspapers were concerned, were able to keep themselves so accurately and completely informed about the great National questions that were agitating the country."
  • From the time abolitionists like Garrison and Lovejoy began agitating for freedom, "the slaves throughout the South kept in close touch with the progress of the movement."

🗣️ Late-night discussions

  • The narrator recalls "many late-at-night whispered discussions" among his mother and other slaves on the plantation.
  • "These discussions showed that they understood the situation, and that they kept themselves informed of events."
  • Even as a child during the Civil War preparation and the war itself, he absorbed these conversations.

📬 The mail-carrier mechanism

  • Often enslaved people "got knowledge of the results of great battles before the white people received it."
  • How it worked:
    1. A colored man was sent to the post-office (about three miles away; mail came once or twice a week).
    2. He would linger long enough to "get the drift of the conversation from the group of white people who naturally congregated there" to discuss news.
    3. On his way back, he would "naturally retail the news that he had secured among the slaves."
    4. Result: "in this way they often heard of important events before the white people at the 'big house,' as the master's house was called."

🗳️ Understanding the war's meaning

  • During Lincoln's first presidential campaign, "the slaves on our far-off plantation, miles from any railroad or large city or daily newspaper, knew what the issues involved were."
  • When war began, "every slave on our plantation felt and knew that, though other issues were discussed, the primal one was that of slavery."
  • "Even the most ignorant members of my race on the remote plantations felt in their hearts, with a certainty that admitted of no doubt, that the freedom of the slaves would be the one great result of the war, if the Northern armies conquered."
  • Every Federal success and Confederate defeat "was watched with the keenest and most intense interest."

🙏 The mother's prayer

  • The narrator's "first knowledge that we were slaves, and that freedom of the slaves was being discussed" came early one morning before day.
  • He was awakened by his mother "kneeling over her children and fervently praying that Lincoln and his armies might be successful, and that one day she and her children might be free."

🍪 Glimpses of the white world and wartime hardship

🍪 Fanning flies and absorbing conversation

  • When the narrator grew large enough, he was required to go to the "big house" at meal-times to fan flies from the table "by means of a large set of paper fans operated by a pully."
  • "Naturally much of the conversation of the white people turned upon the subject of freedom and the war, and I absorbed a good deal of it."

🍪 The ginger-cake aspiration

  • The narrator once saw two young mistresses and lady visitors eating ginger-cakes in the yard.
  • "At that time those cakes seemed to me to be absolutely the most tempting and desirable things that I had ever seen."
  • He resolved: "if I ever got free, the height of my ambition would be reached if I could get to the point where I could secure and eat ginger-cakes in the way that I saw those ladies doing."
  • This small detail illustrates the vast gap between enslaved children and white children in access to even simple pleasures.

☕ War deprivation

  • As the war was prolonged, white people "often found it difficult to secure food for themselves."
  • The narrator thinks "the slaves felt the deprivation less than the whites" because the usual slave diet—corn bread and pork—could be raised on the plantation.
  • But coffee, tea, sugar, and other articles the whites were accustomed to "could not be raised on the plantation, and the conditions brought about by the war frequently made it impossible to secure these things."
  • Substitutes: parched corn was used for coffee; a kind of black molasses replaced sugar; "many times nothing was used to sweeten the so-called tea and coffee."

👞 Clothing and physical discomfort

👞 Wooden shoes

  • The first pair of shoes the narrator recalls wearing were wooden ones: rough leather on top, but bottoms about an inch thick made of wood.
  • "When I walked they made a fearful noise, and besides this they were very inconvenient since there was no yielding to the natural pressure of the foot."
  • "In wearing them one presented an exceedingly awkward appearance."

👕 The flax shirt ordeal

  • "The most trying ordeal that I was forced to endure as a slave boy, however, was the wearing of a flax shirt."
  • The excerpt ends before describing this ordeal in detail, but the narrator signals it as the worst physical discomfort of his childhood.

Note: The title "6.4 Tennessee Williams" does not match the content of this excerpt, which is clearly an autobiographical slave narrative (likely from Booker T. Washington's Up from Slavery). The excerpt contains no mention of Tennessee Williams or his work.

40

6.5 James Dickey

6.5 James Dickey

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

This excerpt, drawn from a slave narrative (not by James Dickey), argues that despite slavery's moral wrong, enslaved people often showed loyalty and generosity toward their masters, and that slavery harmed both races by degrading labor and undermining self-reliance among whites.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • Slaves' attitudes toward masters: The excerpt claims slaves felt genuine sorrow and loyalty toward their owners, even protecting them and honoring debts after emancipation.
  • Post-war loyalty: Former slaves are described as continuing to support impoverished former masters financially and emotionally.
  • Slavery's harm to whites: The institution caused white slaveholders to view labor as degrading, leading to neglect of practical skills and property maintenance.
  • Common confusion: The narrator distinguishes "wanting freedom" from "feeling bitterness"—slaves universally wanted freedom but did not necessarily harbor resentment toward individual masters.
  • Paradoxical claim about slavery's effects: The narrator argues that American slavery, despite its cruelty, left Black people in a "stronger and more hopeful condition" than Black people elsewhere, though he condemns the institution itself.

📖 Life under slavery

👕 Material hardships

  • Clothing: The narrator recalls wearing rough flax shirts made from refuse material.

    The flax shirt caused torture "almost equal to the feeling that one would experience if he had a dozen or more chestnut burrs, or a hundred small pin-points, in contact with his flesh."

  • His brother John performed a "generous act" by wearing new flax shirts first to break them in.
  • Footwear: Wooden shoes with rough leather tops and thick wooden bottoms made walking noisy and awkward.
  • Food scarcity during war: Whites struggled more than slaves because plantation staples (corn bread, pork) could be raised locally, but coffee, tea, and sugar could not; parched corn substituted for coffee, black molasses for sugar.

🍰 Childhood aspirations

  • The narrator remembers seeing white mistresses eating ginger-cakes and resolving that "the height of my ambition would be reached if I could secure and eat ginger-cakes in the way that I saw those ladies doing."
  • This detail illustrates the deprivation and limited horizons of enslaved children.

🤝 Relationships between enslaved people and slaveholders

💔 Loyalty and sorrow

  • When one young master ("Mars' Billy") was killed in the Civil War, the narrator describes "real" sorrow in the slave quarters, not "sham sorrow."
  • Reasons given for this attachment:
    • Some slaves had nursed or played with the young master as a child.
    • He had "begged for mercy" when overseers were punishing other slaves.
  • Slaves were "just as anxious to assist in the nursing" of wounded masters as family members were.
  • The slave chosen to sleep in the "big house" during the war was considered to hold "the place of honour."
  • The narrator claims any attacker "would have had to cross the dead body of the slave" to harm the mistresses.

🔒 Trustworthiness and debt repayment

"I think that it will be found to be true that there are few instances, either in slavery or freedom, in which a member of my race has been known to betray a specific trust."

  • Example: An ex-slave from Virginia made a contract to buy his freedom by paying yearly installments. After the Emancipation Proclamation freed him from legal obligation, he walked back to Virginia and paid the remaining three hundred dollars with interest.
  • The man explained: "he had given his word to his master, and his word he had never broken. He felt that he could not enjoy his freedom till he had fulfilled his promise."

🆘 Post-war support

  • The narrator describes "many instances of Negroes tenderly caring for their former masters and mistresses who for some reason have become poor and dependent since the war."
  • Example: On a large plantation, a young white man (son of the former owner) became impoverished and dependent due to alcohol. Despite their own poverty, Black people on the plantation supplied him with coffee, sugar, meat, and other necessities.
  • "Nothing that the coloured people possess is too good for the son of 'old Mars' Tom.'"

⚖️ The narrator's assessment of slavery's effects

🚫 Universal desire for freedom

  • "I have never seen one who did not want to be free, or one who would return to slavery."
  • Don't confuse: lack of bitterness does not mean lack of desire for freedom—the narrator insists all enslaved people wanted freedom.

🌍 Comparative claim about outcomes

  • The narrator argues that "the ten million Negroes inhabiting this country, who themselves or whose ancestors went through the school of American slavery, are in a stronger and more hopeful condition, materially, intellectually, morally, and religiously, than is true of an equal number of black people in any other portion of the globe."
  • He notes that Black Americans "are constantly returning to Africa as missionaries to enlighten those who remained in the fatherland."
  • Important qualifier: "This I say, not to justify slavery—on the other hand, I condemn it as an institution, as we all know that in America it was established for selfish and financial reasons, and not from a missionary motive—but to call attention to a fact, and to show how Providence so often uses men and institutions to accomplish a purpose."

🔄 Harm to both races

"The black man got nearly as much out of slavery as the white man did. The hurtful influences of the institution were not by any means confined to the Negro."

AspectHow slavery harmed whitesMechanism
Labor attitudes"The whole machinery of slavery was so constructed as to cause labour, as a rule, to be looked upon as a badge of degradation, of inferiority."Both races sought to escape labor because it signified low status.
Self-reliance"The slave system on our place, in a large measure, took the spirit of self-reliance and self-help out of the white people."Dependence on slave labor prevented whites from developing practical skills.
Practical skills"My old master had many boys and girls, but not one, so far as I know, ever mastered a single trade or special line of productive industry."Children of slaveholders were not taught trades or household skills.
Property maintenance"Fences were out of repair, gates were hanging half off the hinges, doors creaked, window-panes were out, plastering had fallen but was not replaced, weeds grew in the yard."Slaves lacked personal interest and knowledge; whites lacked skills and work ethic.

🙏 Absence of bitterness

  • "I have long since ceased to cherish any spirit of bitterness against the Southern white people on account of the enslavement of my race."
  • Reasons given:
    • "No one section of our country was wholly responsible for its introduction."
    • Slavery "was recognized and protected for years by the General Government."
    • "Having once got its tentacles fastened on to the economic and social life of the Republic, it was no easy matter for the country to relieve itself of the institution."
  • The narrator expresses pity "from the bottom of my heart" for "any nation or body of people that is so unfortunate as to get entangled in the net of slavery."

🔮 Faith in the future

🌟 Grounds for optimism

  • When asked "how, in the midst of what sometimes seem hopelessly discouraging conditions, I can have such faith in the future of my race in this country," the narrator responds: "I remind them of the wilderness through which and out of which, a good Providence has already led us."
  • The language of "Providence" and "wilderness" frames the experience as a divinely guided journey, despite its cruelty.
41

6.6 Flannery O'Connor

6.6 Flannery O’Connor

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

The excerpt contains no content about Flannery O'Connor; instead, it presents Booker T. Washington's reflections on slavery's effects on both races and his Atlanta Exposition Address advocating practical industrial education and cooperation between races in the South.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • Slavery's dual harm: the institution damaged both white slave owners (who lost self-reliance and practical skills) and enslaved people (who lacked property and formal education but often mastered trades).
  • Freedom's immediate burden: emancipation brought sudden responsibility for housing, livelihood, child-rearing, education, citizenship, and church support—questions that had taken other societies centuries to resolve.
  • "Cast down your bucket where you are": Washington's central metaphor urging Black Americans to seek opportunity in the South through agriculture, mechanics, commerce, and domestic service rather than migration or political office.
  • Common confusion: the excerpt contrasts two paths after emancipation—seeking political positions versus building practical skills and property; Washington argues the latter was neglected in favor of the former.
  • Emphasis on cooperation: Washington prioritizes cementing friendship between races and recognizes the South as offering Black people a "man's chance" in business.

📚 Content mismatch

⚠️ Title vs. actual content

  • The section title references Flannery O'Connor, a 20th-century fiction writer known for Southern Gothic literature.
  • The excerpt contains no mention of O'Connor whatsoever.
  • Instead, the text is from Booker T. Washington's autobiography (likely Up from Slavery), describing his experiences during and after slavery, and his famous 1895 Atlanta Exposition Address.
  • The header "THE TWENTIETH CENTURY & PRE-MODERNISM (1893-1914)" and page references suggest this is part of an anthology or textbook, but the specific excerpt does not cover O'Connor.

🏛️ Slavery's effects on both races

🔗 The institution's dual damage

Washington argues that slavery harmed not only enslaved people but also white slave owners and their families:

"The hurtful influences of the institution were not by any means confined to the Negro."

How slavery damaged white families:

  • Sons and daughters of the plantation owner mastered no trade or productive industry.
  • Girls were not taught to cook, sew, or manage a household.
  • The system "took the spirit of self-reliance and self-help out of the white people."
  • Manual labor became viewed as "a badge of degradation, of inferiority," something both races sought to escape.

How slavery limited enslaved people:

  • Little personal interest in plantation life.
  • Ignorance prevented learning improved methods.
  • Lacked book-learning and property ownership.

Paradoxical outcome:

  • When freedom came, enslaved people were "almost as well fitted to begin life anew as the master, except in the matter of book-learning and ownership of property."
  • Many enslaved people had mastered handicrafts and were neither ashamed nor unwilling to labor.
  • Slave owners and sons had mastered no special industry and had absorbed the feeling that manual labor was beneath them.

🏚️ Plantation decay as evidence

Washington describes physical deterioration as a symptom of the system's failure:

  • Fences out of repair, gates hanging off hinges, doors creaking, window-panes missing.
  • Plastering fallen but not replaced, weeds in the yard.
  • Food was available but lacked "delicacy and refinement of touch and finish."
  • "Waste of food and other materials which was sad."

The cause: enslaved people had little personal stake, and white owners had not learned practical management skills.

🕊️ The day of freedom

📯 Anticipation and arrival

Signs freedom was coming:

  • "Freedom was in the air, and had been for months."
  • Deserting and discharged soldiers constantly passing by.
  • The "grape-vine telegraph" (informal communication network) kept busy day and night carrying news.
  • More singing in slave quarters, bolder and lasting later into the night.
  • Songs about "freedom" previously explained as referring to the afterlife now openly meant "freedom of the body in this world."

The announcement:

  • A stranger (presumably a United States officer) read a long paper—"the Emancipation Proclamation, I think."
  • "We were told that we were all free, and could go when and where we pleased."
  • Washington's mother "leaned over and kissed her children, while tears of joy ran down her cheeks."

😰 From rejoicing to gloom

Initial reaction:

  • "Great rejoicing, and thanksgiving, and wild scenes of ecstasy."
  • "No feeling of bitterness"—in fact, "pity among the slaves for our former owners."

Rapid shift in mood:

  • By the time people returned to their cabins, "there was a change in their feelings."
  • "The great responsibility of being free, of having charge of themselves, of having to think and plan for themselves and their children, seemed to take possession of them."

"It was very much like suddenly turning a youth of ten or twelve years out into the world to provide for himself."

The overwhelming questions:

  • Finding a home.
  • Earning a living.
  • Rearing children.
  • Education.
  • Citizenship.
  • Establishing and supporting churches.

Washington observes: "In a few hours the great questions with which the Anglo-Saxon race had been grappling for centuries had been thrown upon these people to be solved."

👴 Special hardships for the elderly

  • Some enslaved people were seventy or eighty years old, with their best days gone.
  • No strength to earn a living in a strange place among strange people.
  • Deep attachment to "old Marster" and "old Missus" and their children, built over nearly half a century.
  • "It was no light thing to think of parting."
  • Gradually, older enslaved people began returning to the "big house" for whispered conversations about the future.

🎤 The Atlanta Exposition Address

🎯 Washington's goal

When Washington rose to speak at the Atlanta Exposition, his primary aim was clear:

"The thing that was uppermost in my mind was the desire to say something that would cement the friendship of the races and bring about hearty cooperation between them."

Context:

  • Introduced by Governor Bullock as "a representative of Negro enterprise and Negro civilization."
  • Considerable cheering, especially from Black attendees.
  • Washington saw "thousands of eyes looking intently into my face."

🪣 "Cast down your bucket where you are"

The central metaphor: Washington tells a parable of a ship lost at sea, dying of thirst, repeatedly signaling a passing vessel for water. The answer comes back four times: "Cast down your bucket where you are." Finally, the captain obeys and draws up fresh water—they were at the mouth of the Amazon River.

Application to Black Americans: Washington urges those "who depend on bettering their condition in a foreign land or who underestimate the importance of cultivating friendly relations with the Southern white man, who is their next-door neighbour" to:

"Cast down your bucket where you are—cast it down in making friends in every manly way of the people of all races by whom we are surrounded."

Specific fields to pursue:

  • Agriculture
  • Mechanics
  • Commerce
  • Domestic service
  • The professions

⚖️ Critique of post-emancipation priorities

Washington identifies a mistake in the early years of freedom:

"Ignorant and inexperienced, it is not strange that in the first years of our new life we began at the top instead of at the bottom; that a seat in Congress or the state legislature was more sought than real estate or industrial skill; that the political convention of stump speaking had more attraction than starting a dairy farm or truck garden."

Don't confuse:

  • Washington is not saying political participation is worthless, but that practical economic foundations were neglected.
  • He argues for building from the bottom (skills, property, businesses) rather than starting at the top (political office).

🤝 Recognition and opportunity

Washington's view of the South:

  • "Whatever other sins the South may be called to bear, when it comes to business, pure and simple, it is in the South that the Negro is given a man's chance in the commercial world."
  • The Exposition itself represents recognition of "the value and manhood of the American Negro."
  • This recognition "will do more to cement the friendship of the two races than any occurrence since the dawn of our freedom."

The danger Washington warns against:

"Our greatest danger is that in the great leap from slavery to freedom we may overlook the fact that the masses of us are to live by the productions of our hands."

The excerpt ends mid-sentence, but the implication is clear: Washington fears Black Americans will neglect practical, productive labor in favor of other pursuits.

42

6.7 Postmodernism

6.7 Postmodernism

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

The excerpt provided does not contain content related to postmodernism; instead, it presents a historical speech and its reception focused on race relations, economic self-reliance, and social progress in the post-Reconstruction American South.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • Content mismatch: The excerpt is a historical document (late 19th/early 20th century) about economic and social strategy, not a discussion of postmodernism as a philosophical or cultural movement.
  • Actual subject matter: The text describes a speech advocating for economic self-sufficiency, practical education, and cooperation between races in the South.
  • Historical context: The speech was delivered at an exposition and received widespread acclaim from political figures and newspapers.
  • Common confusion: The title "6.7 Postmodernism" does not match the content, which belongs to the "Twentieth Century & Pre-Modernism (1893-1914)" period as indicated in the page headers.

📄 Content analysis

📄 What the excerpt actually contains

The provided text is a historical speech transcript and autobiographical account, not theoretical or critical material about postmodernism. The excerpt includes:

  • An extended metaphor about a ship seeking water (the "cast down your bucket" parable)
  • Advice to African Americans to seek economic opportunity locally rather than abroad
  • Appeals to white Southerners to employ local African American labor rather than immigrants
  • Descriptions of the speech's reception by political leaders and newspapers
  • A letter from President Grover Cleveland praising the address

🚫 What is missing

  • No postmodernist theory: The excerpt contains no discussion of postmodernism's characteristics (skepticism toward grand narratives, deconstruction, fragmentation, irony, pastiche, etc.).
  • No relevant time period: Postmodernism as a movement emerged mid-to-late 20th century; this text is from 1895.
  • No philosophical content: The excerpt does not engage with epistemology, textual theory, or cultural criticism associated with postmodernism.

⚠️ Note on substantive content

⚠️ Excerpt limitations

The excerpt provided does not contain substantive content related to the stated title "6.7 Postmodernism." To create meaningful review notes on postmodernism, a different source excerpt would be required—one that actually discusses postmodernist theory, key thinkers, characteristics of postmodern art and literature, or critiques of postmodernism.

📋 What would be needed

For a proper postmodernism section, the excerpt should include:

  • Definitions and characteristics of postmodernism as a cultural/philosophical movement
  • Key concepts (e.g., metanarratives, simulacra, hyperreality, intertextuality)
  • Distinctions between modernism and postmodernism
  • Examples from literature, art, architecture, or philosophy
  • Major theorists or practitioners associated with the movement
43

6.8 Theodore Roethke

6.8 Theodore Roethke

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

The excerpt does not contain content about Theodore Roethke; instead, it presents Booker T. Washington's reflections on the reception of his Atlanta Exposition address and his experience criticizing the quality of the Southern Black ministry.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • What the excerpt actually covers: Booker T. Washington's account of reactions to his Atlanta address and a later controversy over his criticism of Black ministers, not Theodore Roethke.
  • Initial vs. delayed reactions: Washington's Atlanta speech was first praised by Black communities but later criticized by some who felt he was too conciliatory toward Southern whites.
  • The ministry controversy: Washington's honest assessment of Black ministers' qualifications drew widespread condemnation from religious bodies, but later investigation vindicated his position.
  • Washington's principle on criticism: He refused to retract or explain during the controversy, trusting that "time and the sober second thought of the people would vindicate" him.
  • Common confusion: The title suggests content about poet Theodore Roethke, but the excerpt contains autobiographical material from Booker T. Washington's Up From Slavery.

📢 Reception of the Atlanta Address

🎭 Initial enthusiasm

  • Washington's Atlanta Exposition address caused unprecedented press sensation and brought numerous commercial offers:
    • Lecture bureaus offered up to $50,000 or $200/night plus expenses
    • Magazine and newspaper editors requested articles
  • Washington declined all commercial arrangements, stating his life-work was at Tuskegee and he would only speak "in the interests of the Tuskegee school and my race."

🔄 The delayed backlash

  • After initial praise, a shift occurred when people "began reading the speech in cold type."
  • Some Black readers felt they had "been hypnotized" and that Washington:
    • Had been "too liberal in my remarks toward the Southern whites"
    • Had "not spoken out strongly enough for what they termed the 'rights' of the race"
  • Don't confuse: The immediate reaction (enthusiasm) with the considered reaction (criticism from some quarters); Washington notes "there was a reaction, so far as a certain element of my own race was concerned."
  • Eventually, "these reactionary ones seemed to have been won over to my way of believing and acting."

🤝 Washington's View on Prejudice and Purpose

🌍 Cleveland as exemplar

Washington uses President Grover Cleveland to illustrate his ideals:

  • Cleveland showed no color prejudice, treating an old "auntie" in rags with the same care as a millionaire
  • Washington's conclusion: "He is too great for that [color prejudice]."

🔍 The "little, narrow people"

Washington defines prejudiced people as "only the little, narrow people who live for themselves, who never read good books, who do not travel, who never open up their souls in a way to permit them to come into contact with other souls—with the great outside world."

Key observations:

  • "No man whose vision is bounded by colour can come into contact with what is highest and best in the world."
  • "Few things, if any, are capable of making one so blind and narrow as race prejudice."

💡 Life's purpose

Washington's core principle, shared with students:

  • "The one thing that is most worth living for—and dying for, if need be—is the opportunity of making some one else more happy and more useful."
  • "The happiest people are those who do the most for others; the most miserable are those who do the least."

⛪ The Ministry Controversy

📝 The triggering article

About ten years after Tuskegee's founding:

  • Dr. Lyman Abbott (editor of Outlook, formerly Christian Union) asked Washington to assess the "exact condition, mental and moral, of the coloured ministers in the South"
  • Washington wrote honestly: "The picture painted was a rather black one"
  • His justification: "It could not be otherwise with a race but a few years out of slavery, a race which had not had time or opportunity to produce a competent ministry."

🔥 The firestorm of condemnation

The response was swift and widespread:

  • Letters of condemnation from ministers across the country
  • For about a year, every Black religious association and conference passed resolutions:
    • Condemning Washington
    • Calling for retraction or modification
    • Advising parents to stop sending children to Tuskegee
  • One association appointed a "missionary" to warn people against Tuskegee
  • Black newspapers, especially religious organs, joined the "general chorus of condemnation or demands for retraction"

Irony noted by Washington: The appointed "missionary" kept his own son enrolled at Tuskegee.

🛡️ Washington's response strategy

Washington's approach during the controversy:

  • "I did not utter a word of explanation or retraction."
  • His reasoning: "I knew that I was right, and that time and the sober second thought of the people would vindicate me."

✅ Vindication

The outcome proved Washington correct:

  • "Bishops and other church leaders began to make a careful investigation of the conditions of the ministry"
  • They "found out that I was right"
  • "The oldest and most influential bishop in one branch of the Methodist Church said that my words were far too mild"
  • Public sentiment began "demanding a purifying of the ministry"
  • Washington claims (supported by influential ministers) that "my words had much to do with starting a demand for the placing of a higher type of men" in ministry positions

Don't confuse: Washington's silence during the controversy with passivity—it was a deliberate strategy based on confidence in his assessment and trust in eventual vindication through investigation.

44

Ralph Ellison

6.9 Ralph Ellison

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

Booker T. Washington's strategy was to stand firm when criticized for speaking truth, trusting that time and investigation would vindicate him, and he believed African Americans would gain full political rights through gradual, merit-based recognition by Southern whites rather than through external force.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • Washington's response to criticism: when condemned for criticizing the Negro ministry, he remained silent and was eventually vindicated when church leaders investigated and confirmed his claims.
  • His approach to political rights: believed rights would come through "natural, slow growth" based on property, intelligence, and character, not through outside forcing or overnight change.
  • Atlanta Exposition recognition: Washington argues that being invited to speak and serve as a juror happened because there was no external demand forcing it—Southern officials acted from merit recognition, not coercion.
  • Common confusion: Washington does not say African Americans should stop voting; rather, they should vote based on principle and seek advice from intelligent neighbors (including white ones), just as they do for business matters.
  • Voting law position: opposes laws that let ignorant poor whites vote while blocking blacks in the same condition; supports educational or property tests only if applied equally to both races.

🛡️ Washington's strategy when facing condemnation

🛡️ The ministry controversy

  • Washington published an article criticizing the competence of the Negro ministry, arguing the race had not had time since slavery to produce a well-trained ministry.
  • Response: every Negro minister, religious association, and conference condemned him; many passed resolutions demanding retraction; some advised parents not to send children to Tuskegee; religious newspapers joined the chorus.
  • Washington's reaction: "During the whole time of the excitement, and through all the criticism, I did not utter a word of explanation or retraction."

✅ Vindication through investigation

  • Church bishops and leaders eventually investigated the ministry's actual conditions.
  • Result: they found Washington was right; one influential Methodist bishop said Washington's words were "far too mild."
  • Public sentiment shifted toward demanding "a purifying of the ministry."
  • Many who once condemned him later thanked him for his frank words.
  • Example principle from the excerpt: "the thing to do, when one feels sure that he has said or done the right thing, and is condemned, is to stand still and keep quiet. If he is right, time will show it."

🤝 Changed relationship with clergy

  • Washington notes "at the present time I have no warmer friends among any class than I have among the clergymen."
  • He views the improvement in Negro ministers' character as "one of the most gratifying evidences of the progress of the race."

🎖️ Atlanta Exposition recognition and merit

🎖️ Invitation to serve as judge

  • After his Atlanta speech, Dr. Gilman (President of Johns Hopkins) invited Washington to serve as a judge of awards in the Department of Education.
  • Washington was surprised because his duties included judging both colored and white school exhibits.
  • The jury board had sixty members, about equally divided between Southern and Northern whites, including college presidents, scientists, and specialists.

🤝 Treatment and respect

  • Thomas Nelson Page (a Southerner) moved that Washington be made secretary of their division; the motion passed unanimously.
  • Nearly half the division were Southern people.
  • Washington reports: "In performing my duties in the inspection of the exhibits of white schools I was in every case treated with respect."

🔑 The merit principle

  • Washington uses this experience to illustrate his political philosophy.
  • Key question: "Suppose that some months before the opening of the Atlanta Exposition there had been a general demand from the press and public platform outside the South that a Negro be given a place on the opening programme, and that a Negro be placed upon the board of jurors of award. Would any such recognition of the race have taken place? I do not think so."
  • His conclusion: "The Atlanta officials went as far as they did because they felt it to be a pleasure, as well as a duty, to reward what they considered merit in the Negro race."

Washington's principle: "there is something in human nature which we cannot blot out, which makes one man, in the end, recognize and reward merit in another, regardless of colour or race."

🗳️ Washington's political philosophy

🌱 Gradual growth vs. forced change

  • Washington believes "the time will come when the Negro in the South will be accorded all the political rights which his ability, character, and material possessions entitle him to."
  • But: "the opportunity to freely exercise such political rights will not come in any large degree through outside or artificial forcing."
  • Instead: rights "will be accorded to the Negro by the Southern white people themselves, and that they will protect him in the exercise of those rights."
  • Timing: "Just as soon as the South gets over the old feeling that it is being forced by 'foreigners,' or 'aliens,' to do something which it does not want to do, I believe that the change in the direction that I have indicated is going to begin."

🐢 "Natural, slow growth, not an over-night, gourd-vine affair"

  • Washington frames political rights as "a matter of natural, slow growth."
  • Foundation: "the slow but sure influences that proceed from the possession of property, intelligence, and high character."
  • The Negro should "deport himself modestly in regard to political claims" while building this foundation.

🏊 Voting: keep practicing, but vote wisely

Don't confuse: Washington does not advocate stopping voting.

  • Clear statement: "I do not believe that the Negro should cease voting, for a man cannot learn the exercise of self-government by ceasing to vote any more than a boy can learn to swim by keeping out of the water."
  • But: "in his voting he should more and more be influenced by those of intelligence and character who are his next-door neighbours."
  • Example of inconsistency Washington criticizes: "I know coloured men who, through the encouragement, help, and advice of Southern white people, have accumulated thousands of dollars' worth of property, but who, at the same time, would never think of going to those same persons for advice concerning the casting of their ballots. This, it seems to me, is unwise and unreasonable."
  • Important caveat: "I do not mean that the Negro should buckle, or not vote from principle, for the instant he ceases to vote from principle he loses the confidence and respect of the Southern white man even."

⚖️ Voting laws must be equal

Washington's positionReasoning
Opposes laws that let ignorant poor whites vote while blocking blacks in the same condition"Such a law is not only unjust, but it will react, as all unjust laws do, in time"
The perverse incentive"the effect of such a law is to encourage the Negro to secure education and property, and at the same time it encourages the white man to remain in ignorance and poverty"
Supports educational or property tests"I believe that in the South we are confronted with peculiar conditions that justify the protection of the ballot in many of the states, for a while at least, either by an educational test, a property test, or by both combined"
Critical requirement"whatever tests are required, they should be made to apply with equal and exact justice to both races"

🔮 Long-term predictions

  • Washington believes ballot-box cheating will eventually cease "through the operation of intelligence and friendly race relations."
  • Moral argument: "the white man who begins by cheating a Negro out of his ballot soon learns to cheat a white man out of his, and that the man who does this ends his career of dishonesty by the theft of property or by some equally serious crime."
  • Ultimate vision: "the time will come when the South will encourage all of its citizens to vote. It will see that it pays better, from every standpoint, to have healthy, vigorous life than to have that political stagnation which always results when one-half of the population has no share and no interest in the Government."
  • General principle: "As a rule, I believe in universal, free suffrage," but with temporary, equally-applied tests in the South due to "peculiar conditions."
45

James Baldwin

6.10 James Baldwin

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

Booker T. Washington's public criticism of the Negro ministry sparked widespread condemnation but ultimately vindicated his position and led to ministerial reform, demonstrating that standing firm on principle when right will be validated by time and sober reflection.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • The controversy: Washington publicly criticized the competency of the Negro ministry, triggering a year of condemnation from religious bodies, ministers, and newspapers across the country.
  • Washington's response strategy: He refused to explain or retract his words, trusting that time and "sober second thought" would vindicate him.
  • The vindication: Church leaders investigated and confirmed Washington was right; public sentiment shifted toward demanding higher standards for ministers.
  • Political philosophy: Washington believed political rights for Black Americans in the South would come through merit, property, intelligence, and character rather than external force, and that change must be gradual and earned through natural growth.
  • Common confusion: Washington did not advocate ceasing to vote; rather, he argued for voting based on principle and seeking advice from intelligent neighbors regardless of race, while opposing unjust laws that allowed ignorant white men to vote but prevented Black men in the same condition from voting.

🔥 The ministry controversy and its resolution

🔥 The initial criticism

Washington published an article criticizing the Negro ministry, arguing that:

  • The race had only been a few years out of slavery
  • There had not been sufficient time or opportunity to produce a competent ministry

This statement was based on his assessment of actual conditions, not prejudice.

📬 The backlash

The condemnation was swift and widespread:

  • Letters of condemnation from Negro ministers across the country
  • For a year, every religious association and conference passed resolutions condemning him or demanding retraction
  • Many organizations advised parents to stop sending children to Tuskegee
  • One association appointed a "missionary" to warn people against Tuskegee (though notably, this missionary kept his own son enrolled)
  • Colored newspapers, especially religious organs, joined the chorus of criticism

🛡️ Washington's strategy: silence and patience

Washington's approach: "During the whole time of the excitement, and through all the criticism, I did not utter a word of explanation or retraction."

His reasoning:

  • He knew he was right
  • He trusted that time and sober second thought would vindicate him
  • He believed in standing still and keeping quiet when condemned for doing the right thing

Why this mattered: This was not stubbornness but strategic patience—allowing facts to speak for themselves.

✅ The vindication

The turnaround came through investigation:

  • Bishops and church leaders began careful investigation of ministry conditions
  • They found Washington was correct
  • One influential Methodist bishop said Washington's words were "far too mild"
  • Public sentiment shifted toward demanding "a purifying of the ministry"
  • Many who once condemned him later thanked him for his frank words

Result: The Negro ministry's attitude toward Washington completely reversed—clergymen became among his warmest friends, and the improvement in ministerial character became "one of the most gratifying evidences of the progress of the race."

🎓 The Atlanta Exposition experience

🏆 The unexpected invitation

After his controversial Atlanta speech, Washington received a surprising invitation from Dr. Gilman, President of Johns Hopkins University:

  • To serve as one of the Judges of Award in the Department of Education at the Atlanta Exposition
  • This was even more surprising than the original speaking invitation
  • His duties included judging exhibits of both colored and white schools

🤝 The jury experience

The board composition and dynamics:

  • Sixty members total
  • About equally divided between Southern and Northern white people
  • Included college presidents, leading scientists, men of letters, and specialists
  • Thomas Nelson Page (a Southerner) moved that Washington be made secretary of their division
  • The motion was unanimously adopted
  • Nearly half the division were Southern people

Treatment: Washington was treated with respect in every case when inspecting white school exhibits, and parted from associates with regret.

💡 What the experience revealed

Washington used this experience to illustrate his political philosophy:

  • The recognition came because Atlanta officials felt it was "a pleasure, as well as a duty, to reward what they considered merit in the Negro race"
  • It was not forced from outside by press or public platform demands
  • He believed such forcing would have prevented the recognition

Washington's principle: "There is something in human nature which we cannot blot out, which makes one man, in the end, recognize and reward merit in another, regardless of colour or race."

🗳️ Washington's political philosophy

🌱 The path to political rights

Washington's belief about how political rights would be achieved:

  • The time would come when the Negro in the South would be accorded all political rights that "his ability, character, and material possessions entitle him to"
  • This would not come through "outside or artificial forcing"
  • It would be accorded by Southern white people themselves, who would protect those rights
  • Change would begin once the South got over feeling forced by "foreigners" or "aliens"

Key mechanism: "A matter of natural, slow growth, not an over-night, gourd-vine affair."

🎯 The proper Negro strategy

Washington outlined what he believed the Negro should do:

ActionReasoning
Deport himself modestly regarding political claimsDepend on "slow but sure influences that proceed from the possession of property, intelligence, and high character"
Not cease voting"A man cannot learn the exercise of self-government by ceasing to vote any more than a boy can learn to swim by keeping out of the water"
Be influenced by intelligent neighborsSeek advice from those of "intelligence and character who are his next-door neighbours"
Vote from principleNever buckle or abandon principle, as this loses the confidence and respect of Southern white men

⚖️ On voting laws and justice

Washington's position on voting restrictions:

  • He believed in "universal, free suffrage" as a rule
  • He acknowledged "peculiar conditions" in the South that might justify protecting the ballot temporarily
  • Educational tests, property tests, or both combined might be justified "for a while at least"
  • Critical requirement: "Whatever tests are required, they should be made to apply with equal and exact justice to both races"

What he opposed:

"I do not believe that any state should make a law that permits an ignorant and poverty-stricken white man to vote, and prevents a black man in the same condition from voting."

His reasoning: Such unjust laws react negatively because they:

  • Encourage the Negro to secure education and property
  • Encourage the white man to remain in ignorant and poverty
  • Lead to broader dishonesty (cheating a Negro at the ballot box leads to cheating white men, then to theft and serious crime)

🔍 The practical example

Washington illustrated the unreasonableness of current practice:

  • He knew colored men who, with encouragement and help from Southern white people, had accumulated thousands of dollars in property
  • Yet these same men would never think of going to those same white neighbors for advice about casting their ballots
  • He called this "unwise and unreasonable, and should cease"

Don't confuse: Seeking advice from intelligent neighbors ≠ abandoning principle. Washington explicitly stated the Negro should never "buckle, or not vote from principle."

🔮 Washington's long-term prediction

He believed that in time:

  • Through "intelligence and friendly race relations," all ballot-box cheating would cease
  • The South would encourage all citizens to vote
  • It would recognize that having healthy, vigorous political life "pays better, from every standpoint" than the "political stagnation which always results when one-half of the population has no share and no interest in the Government"

📖 Life lessons from experience

📖 The principle of standing firm

Washington drew a broader lesson from his ministry controversy:

"The thing to do, when one feels sure that he has said or done the right thing, and is condemned, is to stand still and keep quiet. If he is right, time will show it."

This principle was confirmed by:

  • His experience with the Negro ministry
  • Other events in his life

Application: When certain of being right, patience and silence are more effective than explanation or defense.

46

6.11 Allen Ginsberg

6.11 Allen Ginsberg

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

The excerpt provided does not contain any content about Allen Ginsberg; instead, it presents material on Booker T. Washington's views on voting rights and an introduction to W. E. B. Du Bois's life and work.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • The excerpt discusses Washington's stance on voting qualifications and Du Bois's biography, not Allen Ginsberg.
  • Washington advocates for educational or property tests applied equally to both races as temporary ballot protections in the South.
  • Du Bois introduced the concept of "double consciousness" and criticized Washington's accommodationist approach.
  • The excerpt includes Du Bois's foreword to The Souls of Black Folk, which frames the "problem of the Twentieth Century" as "the problem of the color line."
  • Common confusion: The title "6.11 Allen Ginsberg" does not match the excerpt content, which focuses on early 20th-century African-American intellectuals.

⚠️ Content mismatch

⚠️ No Ginsberg material present

The excerpt contains no information about Allen Ginsberg, the Beat Generation poet. Instead, it presents:

  • A passage from Booker T. Washington on voting rights and ballot qualifications.
  • A biographical sketch of W. E. B. Du Bois (1868–1963).
  • Excerpts from Du Bois's The Souls of Black Folk (1905).

The material belongs to the section "The Twentieth Century & Pre-Modernism (1893–1914)" and discusses African-American intellectual history, not mid-20th-century poetry or the Beat movement.

📚 Washington on voting rights

📚 The ballot and education

Washington argues that unjust voting laws—those that allow an "ignorant and poverty-stricken white man to vote" while preventing "a black man in the same condition from voting"—will backfire over time.

  • Such laws encourage African Americans to pursue education and property while encouraging white men to remain in ignorance and poverty.
  • Washington predicts that "cheating at the ballot-box" will eventually cease through "intelligence and friendly race relations."
  • He warns that dishonesty at the ballot spreads: a white man who cheats a Black voter out of his ballot will soon cheat other white voters, leading to broader crime.

🗳️ Qualified suffrage with equal application

Washington believes in "universal, free suffrage" but argues that "peculiar conditions" in the South justify temporary ballot protections "either by an educational test, a property test, or by both combined."

  • Key requirement: "whatever tests are required, they should be made to apply with equal and exact justice to both races."
  • Washington frames this as pragmatic rather than permanent, suggesting that eventually "the South will encourage all of its citizens to vote."
  • He argues that political participation by all citizens produces "healthy, vigorous life" rather than "political stagnation."

🎓 W. E. B. Du Bois: biography and context

🎓 Early life and education

  • Born in Massachusetts (1868) to an affluent family in Great Barrington, a town with few African-American families.
  • Described his youth as pleasant until he realized "his skin color, not his academic ability, set him apart from his peers."
  • Self-identified as "mulatto" while in Massachusetts; first encountered Jim Crow laws after moving to Nashville to attend Fisk University.
  • Completed a bachelor's degree at Fisk, then pursued graduate study at Harvard University.
  • Awarded a prestigious one-year fellowship at the University of Berlin, where he worked with prominent social scientists.
  • In 1895, became the first African American to earn a Ph.D. from Harvard; his dissertation was published as the first volume in Harvard Historical Studies.

📖 Career and major works

  • Held teaching appointments at Wilberforce College, the University of Pennsylvania, and Atlanta University.
  • Produced The Souls of Black Folk (1905) while at Atlanta University.
  • In 1910, left academia to co-found the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) in New York City.
  • Served as editor of the NAACP's official publication, The Crisis.
  • Was a central orchestrator of the Harlem Renaissance.

🧠 "The Talented Tenth" and criticism of Washington

  • In "The Talented Tenth" (a chapter from The Negro Problem, 1903), Du Bois argued that the best African-American artists were capable of producing art as complex as any white artist.
  • Openly critical of Washington, whom he saw as an "accommodationist."
  • Disagreed with many of Washington's views and was especially angered by the result of Plessy v. Ferguson.
  • Don't confuse: Washington advocated gradual progress and temporary acceptance of segregation; Du Bois demanded full equality between the races immediately.

🌍 Later life

  • By 1920, grew frustrated with what he viewed as a lack of positive movement on racial progress.
  • Focused the second half of his career on legislative reform for national race relations and the socio-economic conditions of African Americans.
  • Late in life, renounced his American citizenship, joined the Communist party, and moved to Ghana (1961), where he remained until his death in 1963.

💭 Double consciousness and The Souls of Black Folk

💭 The concept of double consciousness

Du Bois describes double consciousness as "the sense of always looking at one's self through the eyes of others, of measuring one's soul by the tape of a world that looks on in amused contempt and pity. One ever feels his two-ness—an American, a Negro; two souls, two thoughts."

  • This is possibly Du Bois's most famous literary and academic contribution.
  • It captures the internal conflict of being both American and Black in a society that views Blackness with "contempt and pity."
  • The concept appears in "Of Our Spiritual Strivings," the first essay in The Souls of Black Folk.

📜 The Foreword to The Souls of Black Folk

Du Bois frames the book's purpose and scope:

  • "Herein lie buried many things which if read with patience may show the strange meaning of being black here at the dawning of the Twentieth Century."
  • Central claim: "the problem of the Twentieth Century is the problem of the color line."
  • The book sketches "the spiritual world in which ten thousand thousand Americans live and strive."

Structure of the book (as described in the Foreword):

  • Two chapters on what Emancipation meant and its aftermath.
  • A chapter on the rise of personal leadership, with candid criticism of "the leader who bears the chief burden of his race to-day" (likely Washington).
  • Two chapters on "the two worlds within and without the Veil" and the problem of training men for life.
  • Chapters on the struggles of the Black peasantry and the relations between "the sons of master and man."
  • Chapters that step "within the Veil" to explore the meaning of religion, human sorrow, and the struggle of greater souls.
  • A tale "twice told but seldom written" and a chapter of song.

🎵 The Sorrow Songs

  • Before each chapter stands "a bar of the Sorrow Songs—some echo of haunting" (the sentence is incomplete in the excerpt).
  • This refers to African-American spirituals, which Du Bois uses as epigraphs to frame each chapter's themes.
47

6.11 Adrienne Rich

6.11 Adrienne Rich

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

The excerpt does not contain content about Adrienne Rich; instead, it presents W.E.B. Du Bois's exploration of the "problem of the color line" and the experience of double-consciousness faced by African Americans at the turn of the twentieth century.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • The central problem: Du Bois identifies "the problem of the Twentieth Century is the problem of the color line."
  • The concept of the Veil: a metaphor for the separation between Black Americans and the white world, creating two distinct worlds "within and without the Veil."
  • Double-consciousness: the experience of seeing oneself through the eyes of a world that views one with "amused contempt and pity," resulting in "two souls, two thoughts, two unreconciled strivings."
  • The goal of striving: to merge the double self into a unified identity—to be both a Negro and an American without rejection or isolation.
  • Common confusion: the Veil is not simply about physical segregation but about a psychological and spiritual separation that shapes self-perception and consciousness.

📖 The problem and the Veil

📖 The color line as the central problem

  • Du Bois frames his entire work around one claim: "the problem of the Twentieth Century is the problem of the color line."
  • The book sketches "the spiritual world in which ten thousand thousand Americans live and strive"—referring to Black Americans.
  • The work covers multiple dimensions: Emancipation and its aftermath, leadership, the "two worlds within and without the Veil," education, the Black peasantry, and relations between "sons of master and man."

🎭 The metaphor of the Veil

The Veil: a metaphor for the barrier separating Black Americans from the white world, creating distinct spiritual and social realities.

  • Du Bois describes "stepping within the Veil" to reveal "its deeper recesses—the meaning of its religion, the passion of its human sorrow, and the struggle of its greater souls."
  • The Veil is not just a physical separation but a profound divide in experience and perception.
  • Du Bois writes as someone who is "bone of the bone and flesh of the flesh of them that live within the Veil"—an insider perspective.

🪞 The experience of being "a problem"

🪞 The unasked question

  • Between Du Bois and "the other world" lies "an unasked question": "How does it feel to be a problem?"
  • Others approach indirectly, saying things like "I know an excellent colored man" or asking about "Southern outrages" instead of asking the real question directly.
  • Du Bois notes: "being a problem is a strange experience,—peculiar even for one who has never been anything else."

🌅 The childhood revelation

  • The realization comes "in the early days of rollicking boyhood...all in a day, as it were."
  • Example: In a New England schoolhouse, children exchanged visiting-cards; when "one girl, a tall newcomer, refused my card...with a glance," Du Bois suddenly understood he was "different from the others."
  • The moment revealed he was "shut out from their world by a vast veil."
  • His initial response: "I held all beyond it in common contempt, and lived above it"—competing to beat classmates in exams and races.
  • Over time, "this fine contempt began to fade" as he realized "the words I longed for, and all their dazzling opportunities, were theirs, not mine."

🔒 Different responses to the prison-house

Du Bois describes varied reactions among Black youth:

ResponseDescription
Contempt and strivingAttempting to beat white peers and claim prizes through achievement
SycophancyYouth "shrunk into tasteless sycophancy"
Silent hatred"Silent hatred of the pale world...and mocking distrust of everything white"
Bitter questioning"Why did God make me an outcast and a stranger in mine own house?"
  • The metaphor: "The shades of the prison-house closed round about us all"—walls "strait and stubborn to the whitest, but relentlessly narrow, tall, and unscalable to sons of night."

🧠 Double-consciousness

🧠 The concept defined

Double-consciousness: "this sense of always looking at one's self through the eyes of others, of measuring one's soul by the tape of a world that looks on in amused contempt and pity."

  • The Negro is described as "born with a veil, and gifted with second-sight in this American world."
  • This world "yields him no true self-consciousness, but only lets him see himself through the revelation of the other world."
  • The result: "One ever feels his twoness,—an American, a Negro; two souls, two thoughts, two unreconciled strivings; two warring ideals in one dark body."

🧠 The internal conflict

  • The "dogged strength" of the body is what "keeps it from being torn asunder" by these warring ideals.
  • "The history of the American Negro is the history of this strife."
  • Don't confuse: Double-consciousness is not simply having two identities; it is the painful experience of internal conflict between "two unreconciled strivings" that threaten to tear the self apart.

🎯 The goal of striving

🎯 Merging without loss

  • The longing is "to attain self-conscious manhood, to merge his double self into a better and truer self."
  • Crucially, "In this merging he wishes neither of the older selves to be lost."
  • Du Bois rejects two extremes:
    • "He would not Africanize America, for America has too much to teach the world and Africa."
    • "He would not bleach his Negro soul in a flood of white Americanism, for he knows that Negro blood has a message for the world."

🎯 The desired outcome

  • "He simply wishes to make it possible for a man to be both a Negro and an American, without being cursed and spit upon by his fellows, without having the doors of Opportunity closed roughly in his face."
  • The end of striving: "to be a co-worker in the kingdom of culture, to escape both death and isolation, to husband and use his best powers and his latent genius."
  • Du Bois notes that "These powers of body and mind have in the past been strangely wasted, dispersed, or forgotten."

🎵 Structure and sources

🎵 The book's organization

Du Bois outlines the chapters:

  • Two chapters on what Emancipation meant and its aftermath
  • One chapter on "the slow rise of personal leadership" and candid criticism of the current leader
  • Two chapters sketching "the two worlds within and without the Veil" and the problem of "training men for life"
  • Two chapters on "the struggles of the massed millions of the black peasantry"
  • One chapter on "the present relations of the sons of master and man"
  • Chapters stepping "within the Veil" to explore "the meaning of its religion, the passion of its human sorrow, and the struggle of its greater souls"
  • A tale and a chapter of song

🎵 The Sorrow Songs

  • "Before each chapter, as now printed, stands a bar of the Sorrow Songs,—some echo of haunting melody from the only American music which welled up from black souls in the dark past."
  • These songs frame the intellectual and historical analysis with the emotional and spiritual heritage of Black Americans.
48

Toni Morrison

6.12 Toni Morrison

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

The excerpt argues that African Americans experience a fundamental "double-consciousness"—simultaneously seeing themselves as both American and Negro—which creates unreconciled internal conflict and wastes their talents by forcing them to pursue contradictory aims.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • Double-consciousness: African Americans must always view themselves through the eyes of a world that regards them with contempt, creating two warring identities in one person.
  • The core striving: the desire to merge both selves (American and Negro) without losing either, to be accepted as both without facing discrimination.
  • Waste of double aims: trying to satisfy two conflicting ideals has undermined the effectiveness of African American artisans, ministers, doctors, scholars, and artists.
  • Common confusion: the problem is not weakness or absence of power, but the contradiction of pursuing two unreconciled goals simultaneously.
  • Historical disappointment: despite Emancipation, the promised freedom has not delivered true self-consciousness or opportunity, leading to successive failed ideals (freedom itself, then political power, then education).

🪞 The nature of double-consciousness

🪞 What double-consciousness means

Double-consciousness: a peculiar sensation of always looking at one's self through the eyes of others, of measuring one's soul by the tape of a world that looks on in amused contempt and pity.

  • It is not simply having two identities; it is being forced to see yourself only through another's hostile gaze.
  • The excerpt describes it as "no true self-consciousness"—African Americans cannot form an independent sense of self because they must constantly view themselves through the "revelation of the other world."
  • The metaphor of the "veil" suggests a barrier that both obscures and distorts vision.

⚔️ Two warring ideals

  • The excerpt emphasizes "twoness": an American, a Negro; two souls, two thoughts, two unreconciled strivings.
  • These are not complementary but warring—they pull in opposite directions.
  • The body's "dogged strength alone keeps it from being torn asunder."
  • Example: an individual wants to claim American identity and rights, but also wants to honor and preserve Negro heritage and culture—yet the surrounding world treats these as incompatible.

🎯 The goal of the striving

🎯 What African Americans want

The excerpt is explicit about the desired outcome:

  • Merge the double self into a better and truer self.
  • Neither older self should be lost: "He would not Africanize America" and "would not bleach his Negro soul in a flood of white Americanism."
  • Both identities must coexist: "to make it possible for a man to be both a Negro and an American, without being cursed and spit upon by his fellows, without having the doors of Opportunity closed roughly in his face."

🌍 Contributions from both identities

  • America has much to teach the world and Africa.
  • Negro blood also "has a message for the world."
  • The goal is to be "a co-worker in the kingdom of culture," using the best powers and latent genius of African Americans.

Don't confuse: the striving is not assimilation (losing one identity) or separation (rejecting the other), but integration of both.

💔 How double aims waste talent

💔 The contradiction undermines effectiveness

The excerpt argues that pursuing two conflicting goals simultaneously makes African Americans appear weak, but the real problem is internal contradiction:

  • "It is not weakness,—it is the contradiction of double aims."
  • Strength is present but "lose[s] effectiveness" because it is divided.
  • "He had but half a heart in either cause."

🛠️ The black artisan

AimWhat it demandsResult
Escape white contempt for "mere hewers of wood and drawers of water"Pursue higher, more respected workOnly half-hearted commitment to practical labor
"Plough and nail and dig for a poverty-stricken horde"Focus on immediate, practical survival needsOnly half-hearted commitment to skilled craftsmanship
  • The artisan "could only result in making him a poor craftsman" because neither goal receives full attention.

🩺 The minister or doctor

  • Pulled by poverty and ignorance of his people: tempted toward quackery and demagogy (exploiting the vulnerable).
  • Pulled by criticism of the other world: tempted toward ideals that make him ashamed of his "lowly tasks."
  • The result is compromised integrity and effectiveness.

📚 The would-be black scholar (savant)

  • Paradox: the knowledge his own people need is already common knowledge ("a twice-told tale") to white neighbors.
  • Reverse paradox: the knowledge that would teach the white world is incomprehensible ("Greek") to his own community.
  • The scholar cannot satisfy both audiences and is caught between them.

🎨 The black artist

  • The "innate love of harmony and beauty" in African American culture raises "confusion and doubt" in the artist.
  • Why: the beauty he perceives is "the soul-beauty of a race which his larger audience despised."
  • He cannot communicate ("articulate") the message of his own people to an audience that rejects them.
  • Example: an artist creates work rooted in African American experience, but the white audience (whose approval is needed for success) dismisses or mocks it, while his own community may lack the resources to support him.

🌀 The cumulative damage

  • "This waste of double aims... has wrought sad havoc with the courage and faith and deeds of ten thousand thousand people."
  • It has led them to "wooing false gods and invoking false means of salvation."
  • At times it has "even seemed about to make them ashamed of themselves."

📜 Historical disappointments and shifting ideals

📜 The first ideal: Freedom itself

  • Before Emancipation, African Americans "worshipped Freedom with... unquestioning faith."
  • Slavery was seen as "the sum of all villainies, the cause of all sorrow, the root of all prejudice."
  • Emancipation was expected to be "the key to a promised land of sweeter beauty than ever stretched before the eyes of wearied Israelites."

😞 The disappointment

  • "Years have passed away since then,—ten, twenty, forty... and yet the swarthy spectre sits in its accustomed seat at the Nation's feast."
  • "The freedman has not yet found in freedom his promised land."
  • The disappointment is "all the more bitter because the unattained ideal was unbounded save by the simple ignorance of a lowly people."

🗳️ The second ideal: Political power (the ballot)

  • After the initial decade, African Americans grasped a new idea: "The ideal of liberty demanded for its attainment powerful means, and these the Fifteenth Amendment gave him."
  • The ballot was now seen as "the chief means of gaining and perfecting the liberty with which war had partially endowed him."
  • "A million black men started with renewed zeal to vote themselves into the kingdom."
  • Result: "the revolution of 1876 came, and left the half-free serf weary, wondering, but still inspired."

📖 The third ideal: "Book-learning"

  • A new vision gradually replaced the dream of political power: "the ideal of 'book-learning.'"
  • This was "the curiosity, born of compulsory ignorance, to know and test the power of the cabalistic letters of the white man."
  • It seemed to be "the mountain path to Canaan; longer than the highway of Emancipation and law, steep and rugged, but straight, leading to heights high enough to overlook life."

🧗 The struggle to learn

  • "The advance guard toiled, slowly, heavily, doggedly."
  • "This people strove to learn" faithfully and piteously.
  • "It was weary work."
  • Progress was measured in inches; some slipped or fell.
  • "To the tired climbers, the horizon was ever dark, the mists were often cold, the Canaan was always dim and far away."

Don't confuse: each ideal (freedom, voting, education) was pursued with genuine hope, but none delivered the promised transformation because the underlying problem—double-consciousness and the refusal of the white world to grant true acceptance—remained unresolved.

49

6.13 Donald Barthelme

6.13 Donald Barthelme

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

The excerpt does not contain content about Donald Barthelme; instead, it presents a historical narrative about African American experiences from Emancipation through Reconstruction, tracing the evolution of ideals from political power to education to a synthesis of work, culture, and liberty.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • The excerpt is mismatched: the title references Donald Barthelme, but the text is a historical essay about African American post-Emancipation struggles and evolving aspirations.
  • Three successive ideals: the narrative describes a shift from political power (the ballot) to education ("book-learning") to a holistic vision combining work, culture, and liberty.
  • Structural barriers: poverty, ignorance, social degradation, and prejudice are identified as compounding hardships beyond simple economic competition.
  • Common confusion: the text distinguishes between prejudice rooted in cultural defense (which the author acknowledges) and "nameless prejudice" that is arbitrary, personal, and demoralizing.
  • Final synthesis: the conclusion argues that all ideals—education, voting rights, freedom—must be pursued together, not sequentially, to achieve human brotherhood and contribute to American culture.

⚠️ Content mismatch

⚠️ Title vs. text

  • The section title is "6.13 Donald Barthelme," suggesting literary analysis of the postmodern American writer.
  • The provided excerpt contains no mention of Barthelme, his works, or postmodern fiction techniques.
  • Instead, the text is a historical and sociological essay about African American history from the 1860s–1900s, focusing on Reconstruction, education, and racial prejudice.

📖 Actual content

  • The excerpt reads as a chapter from a historical or sociological work, likely early 20th century (references to "the revolution of 1876," "the Fifteenth Amendment," and the tone suggest W.E.B. Du Bois's The Souls of Black Folk).
  • It traces the evolution of African American collective goals over several decades.
  • Because the excerpt does not match the title, the notes below summarize the actual text provided, not Donald Barthelme.

🗳️ First ideal: political power

🗳️ The ballot as freedom

  • After emancipation, African Americans initially saw the vote as "a visible sign of freedom" and "the chief means of gaining and perfecting the liberty" partially won by war.
  • The reasoning: "Had not votes made war and emancipated millions? Had not votes enfranchised the freedmen?"
  • A million Black men pursued political power with "renewed zeal to vote themselves into the kingdom."

📉 Disillusionment

  • "The revolution of 1876" (likely the end of Reconstruction) left the "half-free serf weary, wondering, but still inspired."
  • The dream of political power began to fade as a new vision emerged.

📚 Second ideal: education

📚 "Book-learning" as the new path

  • A "powerful movement" arose: the ideal of education, driven by "curiosity, born of compulsory ignorance, to know and test the power of the cabalistic letters of the white man."
  • Education seemed "the mountain path to Canaan; longer than the highway of Emancipation and law, steep and rugged, but straight, leading to heights high enough to overlook life."

🧗 The struggle to learn

  • The "advance guard toiled, slowly, heavily, doggedly."
  • The excerpt emphasizes how "faithfully, how piteously this people strove to learn."
  • Progress was measured in "inches"; setbacks were common ("where here and there a foot had slipped or some one had fallen").
  • "To the tired climbers, the horizon was ever dark, the mists were often cold, the Canaan was always dim and far away."

🪞 Self-examination and self-consciousness

  • The journey gave "leisure for reflection and self-examination."
  • It transformed "the child of Emancipation to the youth with dawning self-consciousness, self-realization, self-respect."
  • The individual "saw himself,—darkly as through a veil; and yet he saw in himself some faint revelation of his power, of his mission."
  • A key realization: "to attain his place in the world, he must be himself, and not another."

⚖️ The burden analyzed

⚖️ Poverty

  • "Without a cent, without a home, without land, tools, or savings, he had entered into competition with rich, landed, skilled neighbors."
  • "To be a poor man is hard, but to be a poor race in a land of dollars is the very bottom of hardships."

📖 Ignorance

  • Not just illiteracy, but ignorance "of life, of business, of the humanities."
  • "The accumulated sloth and shirking and awkwardness of decades and centuries shackled his hands and feet."

🩸 Social degradation

  • "The red stain of bastardy, which two centuries of systematic legal defilement of Negro women had stamped upon his race."
  • This meant "not only the loss of ancient African chastity, but also the hereditary weight of a mass of corruption from white adulterers, threatening almost the obliteration of the Negro home."

🌑 Prejudice: two kinds

The excerpt distinguishes between two forms of prejudice:

TypeDescriptionResponse
Justified prejudice"Natural defence of culture against barbarism, learning against ignorance, purity against crime, the 'higher' against the 'lower' races""To so much of this strange prejudice as is founded on just homage to civilization, culture, righteousness, and progress, he humbly bows and meekly does obeisance."
Nameless prejudice"Personal disrespect and mockery, the ridicule and systematic humiliation, the distortion of fact and wanton license of fancy, the cynical ignoring of the better and the boisterous welcoming of the worse, the all-pervading desire to inculcate disdain for everything black""Before this there rises a sickening despair that would disarm and discourage any nation save that black host to whom 'discouragement' is an unwritten word."
  • Don't confuse: the author accepts prejudice rooted in real cultural or educational gaps, but condemns arbitrary, personal prejudice that "leaps beyond all this."

🌀 Self-doubt and external pressure

🌀 Internalized despair

  • "The facing of so vast a prejudice could not but bring the inevitable self-questioning, self-disparagement, and lowering of ideals."
  • Internal voices: "Lo! we are diseased and dying... we cannot write, our voting is vain; what need of education, since we must always cook and serve?"

📢 The Nation's echo

  • External reinforcement: "Be content to be servants, and nothing more; what need of higher culture for half-men? Away with the black man's ballot, by force or fraud."
  • The excerpt calls this "the suicide of a race."

🌱 Good from evil

  • "Out of the evil came something of good":
    • "The more careful adjustment of education to real life."
    • "The clearer perception of the Negroes' social responsibilities."
    • "The sobering realization of the meaning of progress."

🔥 Sturm und Drang: synthesis of ideals

🔥 Storm and stress

  • "Storm and stress to-day rocks our little boat on the mad waters of the world-sea."
  • "There is within and without the sound of conflict, the burning of body and rending of soul; inspiration strives with doubt, and faith with vain questionings."

🔗 All ideals must be welded together

  • Past ideals—"physical freedom, political power, the training of brains and the training of hands"—have each "waxed and waned."
  • The excerpt argues: "Each alone was over-simple and incomplete,—the dreams of a credulous race-childhood."
  • The solution: "To be really true, all these ideals must be melted and welded into one."

🎯 What is needed together

  • Education: "The training of the schools we need to-day more than ever,—the training of deft hands, quick eyes and ears, and above all the broader, deeper, higher culture of gifted minds and pure hearts."
  • Political power: "The power of the ballot we need in sheer self-defence,—else what shall save us from a second slavery?"
  • Freedom: "The freedom of life and limb, the freedom to work and think, the freedom to love and aspire."
  • Not sequentially, but together: "Work, culture, liberty,—all these we need, not singly but together, not successively but together, each growing and aiding each."

🌍 The vaster ideal

  • The ultimate goal: "That vaster ideal that swims before the Negro people, the ideal of human brotherhood, gained through the unifying ideal of Race."
  • This means "fostering and developing the traits and talents of the Negro, not in opposition to or contempt for other races, but rather in large conformity to the greater ideals of the American Republic."
  • The vision: "That some day on American soil two world-races may give each to each those characteristics both so sadly lack."

🎶 African American contributions

🎶 What Black Americans bring

  • "We the darker ones come even now not altogether empty-handed."
  • The Declaration's spirit: "There are to-day no truer exponents of the pure human spirit of the Declaration of Independence than the American Negroes."
  • Music: "There is no true American music but the wild sweet melodies of the Negro slave."
  • Folklore: "The American fairy tales and folklore are Indian and African."
  • Faith and reverence: "We black men seem the sole oasis of simple faith and reverence in a dusty desert of dollars and smartness."

🤔 Rhetorical questions

The excerpt closes with questions about what African Americans might offer to enrich American culture:

  • "Will America be poorer if she replace her brutal dyspeptic blundering with light-hearted but determined Negro humility?"
  • "Or her coarse and cruel wit with loving jovial good-humor?"
  • "Or her vulgar music with the soul of the [Negro slave]?"

(The excerpt ends mid-sentence.)

50

6.14 Sylvia Plath

6.14 Sylvia Plath

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

The excerpt does not contain content about Sylvia Plath; instead, it presents W.E.B. Du Bois's analysis of Booker T. Washington's philosophy and influence on African American advancement, arguing that Washington's program of industrial education and political submission, while successful, is incomplete and overlooks essential ideals of higher culture, political rights, and full equality.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • Du Bois's comprehensive ideal: African Americans need work, culture, and liberty together—not singly or successively—to achieve human brotherhood and develop their talents in conformity with American ideals.
  • Washington's program: industrial education, conciliation of the South, and submission/silence on civil and political rights; it gained widespread approval by aligning with the commercial spirit of the age.
  • The Atlanta Compromise: Washington's statement that blacks and whites could be "separate as the five fingers" socially but "one as the hand" in mutual progress; interpreted differently by radicals (as surrender) and conservatives (as working basis).
  • Common confusion: Washington's success vs. completeness—his singleness of vision made him successful, but Du Bois suggests this narrow focus overlooks essential elements of true manhood and broader ideals.
  • Du Bois's critique: while acknowledging Washington's achievements, Du Bois argues the time has come to discuss his mistakes and shortcomings, particularly the narrowness of his educational program and his counsel of submission.

🎯 Du Bois's vision for African American advancement

🎯 The integrated ideal

Du Bois rejects over-simple, incomplete ideals and argues for a unified approach:

All ideals "must be melted and welded into one."

  • Three essential elements:

    • Training of schools: deft hands, quick eyes and ears, and "broader, deeper, higher culture of gifted minds and pure hearts"
    • Power of the ballot: needed "in sheer self-defence" to prevent "a second slavery"
    • Freedom: of life and limb, to work and think, to love and aspire
  • Key principle: "Work, culture, liberty,—all these we need, not singly but together, not successively but together, each growing and aiding each."

🌟 The ultimate goal

  • The "vaster ideal" is human brotherhood gained through the unifying ideal of Race.
  • Purpose: fostering and developing African American traits and talents "not in opposition to or contempt for other races, but rather in large conformity to the greater ideals of the American Republic."
  • Vision: two world-races giving each to each the characteristics both lack.

🎁 African American contributions

Du Bois lists what "the darker ones" bring:

ContributionDescription
Democratic spirit"No truer exponents of the pure human spirit of the Declaration of Independence"
Music"No true American music but the wild sweet melodies of the Negro slave"
Folklore"American fairy tales and folklore are Indian and African"
Faith"Sole oasis of simple faith and reverence in a dusty desert of dollars and smartness"
  • Rhetorical questions suggest America would be enriched by replacing "brutal dyspeptic blundering" with "light-hearted but determined Negro humility," "coarse and cruel wit" with "loving jovial good-humor," and "vulgar music" with "the soul of the Sorrow Songs."

📚 Booker T. Washington's rise and program

📈 Historical context of Washington's ascendancy

  • Timing: began around 1876, "the most striking thing in the history of the American Negro" since then.
  • Conditions that enabled his rise:
    • War memories and ideals were rapidly passing
    • Era of "astonishing commercial development" was dawning
    • "Doubt and hesitation" overtook freedmen's sons
    • Nation was "a little ashamed of having bestowed so much sentiment on Negroes" and was "concentrating its energies on Dollars"

🛠️ Washington's program

Three main components:

  1. Industrial education
  2. Conciliation of the South
  3. Submission and silence as to civil and political rights

Not wholly original: Free Negroes had built industrial schools from 1830 onward; the American Missionary Association taught trades; others had sought alliance with Southern whites.

Washington's innovation: "first indissolubly linked these things; he put enthusiasm, unlimited energy, and perfect faith into his programme, and changed it from a by-path into a veritable Way of Life."

🎭 Reception of Washington's program

  • Startled the nation: hearing a Negro advocate such a program "after many decades of bitter complaint"
  • The South: startled and won applause
  • The North: interested and won admiration
  • Negroes themselves: "after a confused murmur of protest, it silenced if it did not convert" them

🤝 The Atlanta Compromise

🤝 The famous statement

Washington's words at Atlanta:

"In all things purely social we can be as separate as the five fingers, and yet one as the hand in all things essential to mutual progress."

Du Bois calls this "by all odds the most notable thing in Mr. Washington's career."

🔀 Divergent interpretations

The South interpreted it in different ways:

GroupInterpretation
Radicals"Complete surrender of the demand for civil and political equality"
Conservatives"Generously conceived working basis for mutual understanding"
  • Both groups approved it.
  • Result: Washington became "certainly the most distinguished Southerner since Jefferson Davis, and the one with the largest personal following."

🧠 Washington's strategic insight

  • In the South: knew "the heart of the South from birth and training"
  • In the North: "by singular insight he intuitively grasped the spirit of the age which was dominating the North"
  • He "thoroughly did he learn the speech and thought of triumphant commercialism, and the ideals of material prosperity"

Example: "The picture of a lone black boy poring over a French grammar amid the weeds and dirt of a neglected home soon seemed to him the acme of absurdities."

  • Du Bois wonders: "what Socrates and St. Francis of Assisi would say to this."

⚖️ Du Bois's critique of Washington

🎯 The paradox of success

"This very singleness of vision and thorough oneness with his age is a mark of the successful man. It is as though Nature must needs make men narrow in order to give them force."

  • Washington's narrow focus gave him force and success.
  • Results: "his cult has gained unquestioning followers, his work has wonderfully prospered, his friends are legion, and his enemies are confounded."
  • He "stands as the one recognized spokesman of his ten million fellows, and one of the most notable figures in a nation of seventy millions."

⚠️ The need for critique

Du Bois argues:

"The time is come when one may speak in all sincerity and utter courtesy of the mistakes and shortcomings of Mr. Washington's career, as well as of his triumphs."

  • Acknowledges: "it is easier to do ill than well in the world."
  • Hesitates to criticize "a life which, beginning with so little, has done so much."

📋 Previous criticisms mentioned

In the South: Washington had to "walk warily to avoid the harshest judgments."

  • Two incidents threatened his popularity:
    1. Chicago celebration: alluded to color-prejudice "eating away the vitals of the South"
    2. Dining with President Roosevelt

In the North:

  • Feeling that "Washington's counsels of submission overlooked certain elements of true manhood"
  • His "educational programme was unnecessarily narrow"
  • Spiritual sons of Abolitionists not prepared to acknowledge that schools founded before Tuskegee "were wholly failures or worthy of ridicule"

🔍 Don't confuse

  • Success vs. correctness: Washington's program succeeded in gaining followers and approval, but Du Bois suggests this success came from narrowness that overlooked essential ideals.
  • Practical training vs. higher culture: Washington emphasized industrial education; Du Bois argues for "broader, deeper, higher culture of gifted minds and pure hearts" alongside practical skills.
  • Immediate strategy vs. ultimate goals: the Atlanta Compromise may have been a working basis, but Du Bois implies it should not be mistaken for the complete ideal of full equality and political rights.
51

6.15 Don DeLillo

6.15 Don DeLillo

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

The excerpt does not contain content about Don DeLillo; instead, it presents a historical analysis of African American leadership strategies and the criticism of Booker T. Washington's approach, arguing that honest internal criticism within a group is essential for genuine democratic progress and self-determined leadership.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • Core argument: Suppressing honest criticism from within a community—even of a successful leader—is dangerous because it prevents the group from finding and commissioning its own leaders through search and criticism.
  • Three leadership attitudes: When a group faces an environment of "men and ideas," it may adopt revolt and revenge, adjustment to the dominant group's will, or self-realization despite opposition.
  • Historical pattern: African American leadership evolved from revolt (pre-1750) to assimilation attempts (late 1700s) to insurrection and self-development movements (early 1800s) to demands for recognition as freemen (by 1830).
  • Common confusion: Success and popularity do not mean a leader's approach is beyond critique; the excerpt distinguishes between admiring sincerity and questioning theories that gain "wide currency and ascendancy."
  • Washington's position: He is recognized as spokesman for ten million people, but faces strongest opposition from educated and thoughtful members of his own community who feel "deep regret, sorrow, and apprehension" at his theories.

🎯 The critique of imposed leadership

🎯 Why criticism matters for democracy

"Honest and earnest criticism from those whose interests are most nearly touched,—criticism of writers by readers,—this is the soul of democracy and the safeguard of modern society."

  • The excerpt argues that silencing honest opponents is dangerous, not protective.
  • When criticism is suppressed, two bad outcomes occur:
    • Best critics fall into "unfortunate silence and paralysis of effort"
    • Others "burst into speech so passionately and intemperately as to lose listeners"
  • The problem is not criticism itself but the hushing of criticism.

🔍 The cost of external pressure

  • When a group receives "by outer pressure a leader whom they had not recognized before," there is a "palpable gain" but also "irreparable loss."
  • The loss is educational: the group misses the "peculiarly valuable education which a group receives when by search and criticism it finds and commissions its own leaders."
  • Don't confuse: the excerpt does not reject Washington's achievements ("beginning with so little, has done so much") but questions the process by which he became the "one recognized spokesman."

🧩 Washington's position and opposition

🧩 His success and recognition

  • Washington is described as having "unquestioning followers," "wonderfully prospered" work, "legion" friends, and "confounded" enemies.
  • He stands as "the one recognized spokesman of his ten million fellows" and "one of the most notable figures in a nation of seventy millions."
  • His "singleness of vision and thorough oneness with his age" is presented as both a strength ("a mark of the successful man") and a limitation ("Nature must needs make men narrow in order to give them force").

⚠️ Opposition from within

The excerpt emphasizes that the "strongest and most lasting opposition" comes from Washington's own community:

Source of oppositionNatureDetails
SomeMere envy"Disappointment of displaced demagogues and the spite of narrow minds"
Educated and thoughtful colored menDeep concern"Feeling of deep regret, sorrow, and apprehension at the wide currency and ascendancy which some of Mr. Washington's theories have gained"
  • These critics "admire his sincerity of purpose" and "cooperate with Mr. Washington as far as they conscientiously can."
  • It is "no ordinary tribute to this man's tact and power" that he "largely retains the respect of all" while "steering as he must between so many diverse interests and opinions."

🗣️ Types of criticism he faced

In the South:

  • Had to "walk warily to avoid the harshest judgments" because he dealt with "the one subject of deepest sensitiveness to that section."
  • Two incidents provoked violent criticism:
    • Alluding to "color-prejudice that is 'eating away the vitals of the South'" at the Chicago celebration of the Spanish-American War
    • Dining with President Roosevelt

In the North:

  • Criticism that "Mr. Washington's counsels of submission overlooked certain elements of true manhood"
  • Criticism that "his educational programme was unnecessarily narrow"
  • Spiritual descendants of Abolitionists were not prepared to dismiss earlier schools "founded before Tuskegee, by men of broad ideals and self-sacrificing spirit" as "wholly failures or worthy of ridicule"

Public opinion overall:

  • Has been "but too willing to deliver the solution of a wearisome problem into his hands, and say, 'If that is all you and your race ask, take it.'"

📜 Historical patterns of African American leadership

📜 Three attitudes toward environment

When a group faces an environment of "men and ideas" (not just "sticks and stones and beasts"), the excerpt identifies three possible attitudes:

  1. Revolt and revenge: a feeling of opposition
  2. Adjustment: an attempt to adjust all thought and action to the will of the greater group
  3. Self-realization: a determined effort at self-realization and self-development despite environing opinion

The excerpt states: "The influence of all of these attitudes at various times can be traced in the history of the American Negro, and in the evolution of his successive leaders."

🕰️ Before 1750: Revolt and revenge

  • "While the fire of African freedom still burned in the veins of the slaves," leadership had "but the one motive of revolt and revenge."
  • Examples cited: "the terrible Maroons, the Danish blacks, and Cato of Stono"
  • This "veiled all the Americas in fear of insurrection."

🕰️ Late 1700s: Adjustment and assimilation

  • "Liberalizing tendencies of the latter half of the eighteenth century brought, along with kindlier relations between black and white, thoughts of ultimate adjustment and assimilation."
  • Examples of this aspiration:
    • "The earnest songs of Phyllis"
    • "The martyrdom of Attucks"
    • "The fighting of Salem and Poor"
    • "The intellectual accomplishments of Banneker and Derham"
    • "The political demands of the Cuffes"

🕰️ Early 1800s: Insurrection and self-development

In the South (insurrection attempts):

  • "Stern financial and social stress after the war cooled much of the previous humanitarian ardor."
  • Slaves, "aroused undoubtedly by vague rumors of the Haytian revolt," made three fierce attempts:
    • 1800: under Gabriel in Virginia
    • 1822: under Vesey in Carolina
    • 1831: under Nat Turner in Virginia

In the Free States (self-development):

  • "A new and curious attempt at self-development was made."
  • In Philadelphia and New York, "color-prescription led to a withdrawal of Negro communicants from white churches."
  • This led to "the formation of a peculiar socio-religious institution among the Negroes known as the African Church."
  • The excerpt notes this organization was "still living and controlling in its various branches over a million of men" at the time of writing.

🕰️ By 1830: Demands for recognition as freemen

  • "By 1830 slavery seemed hopelessly fastened on the South, and the slaves thoroughly cowed into submission."
  • Free Negroes of the North, "inspired by the mulatto immigrants from the West Indies, began to change the basis of their demands."
  • They "recognized the slavery of slaves, but insisted that they themselves were freemen, and sought assimilation and amalgamation with the nation on the same terms with other men."
  • Key figures: "Forten and Purvis of Philadelphia, Shad of Wilmington, Du Bois of New Haven, Barbadoes of Boston, and others."
  • They "strove singly and together as men, they said, not as slaves; as 'people of color,' not as 'Negroes.'"

Outcome:

  • "The trend of the times, however, refused them recognition save in individual and exceptional cases."
  • They were "considered them as one with all the despised blacks."
  • They "soon found themselves striving to keep even the rights they formerly had of voting and working and moving as freemen."
  • "Schemes of migration and colonization arose among them; but these they refused to entertain."
  • They "eventually turned to the Abolition movement as a final refuge."
  • The excerpt mentions a "new period" led by "Remond, Nell, Wells-Brown, and Douglass" but does not elaborate further.

🔑 Key concepts about group leadership

🔑 The "curious double movement"

"What can be more instructive than the leadership of a group within a group?—that curious double movement where real progress may be negative and actual advance be relative retrogression."

  • The excerpt highlights the complexity of leadership for a minority group within a larger society.
  • "Real progress may be negative" and "actual advance be relative retrogression"—meaning that what looks like progress in one frame may be setback in another.
  • This is described as "the social student's inspiration and despair."

🔑 How leadership types change

  • "History is but the record of such group-leadership; and yet how infinitely changeful is its type and character!"
  • The excerpt emphasizes that leadership is not static; it evolves with circumstances.
  • The American Negro has had "instructive experience in the choosing of group leaders, founding thus a peculiar dynasty which in the light of present conditions is worth while studying."

🔑 The role of environment

  • When the environment is only "sticks and stones and beasts," the attitude is "largely one of determined opposition to and conquest of natural forces."
  • When "to earth and brute is added an environment of men and ideas," the group's attitude becomes more complex, taking one of the three forms described earlier.
  • Don't confuse: the excerpt is not saying one attitude is always correct; it traces how different historical conditions produced different leadership strategies.
52

6.16 Alice Walker

6.16 Alice Walker

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

The excerpt traces African American leadership strategies from post-Revolutionary War insurrections through Booker T. Washington's controversial policy of economic focus and political submission, arguing that Washington's approach creates a paradox that undermines the very progress it seeks.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • Historical progression of strategies: from violent revolt (Gabriel, Vesey, Turner) to self-assertion and political rights (Douglass) to Washington's economic compromise and submission.
  • Washington's unique position: he became a leader of both races—a compromiser between South, North, and Negro—rather than leading his own people alone.
  • The triple paradox: Washington advocates economic progress while surrendering the political rights, civic equality, and higher education necessary to achieve and defend that progress.
  • Common confusion: Washington's program is not simply "economic development" but economic development at the cost of political power, civil rights, and higher education—a trade-off previous leaders rejected.
  • Historical verdict: the excerpt argues that history and reason answer "NO" to whether nine million can progress economically while deprived of political rights and reduced to servile caste status.

📜 Early resistance movements (1800–1831)

🔥 Slave insurrections

After the Revolutionary War, social stress cooled humanitarian sentiment, yet enslaved people made fierce attempts at freedom:

  • 1800: Gabriel's revolt in Virginia
  • 1822: Vesey's uprising in Carolina
  • 1831: Nat Turner's rebellion in Virginia

These were likely inspired by vague rumors of the Haitian revolt and represented the slaves' impatience at the persistence of slavery.

⛪ Free Black self-development in the North

In Philadelphia and New York, color-prescription (racial discrimination) led to a withdrawal of Black communicants from white churches.

The African Church: a peculiar socio-religious institution formed by Negroes, still living and controlling over a million members in its various branches.

This represented a new attempt at self-development separate from white institutions.

📢 Walker's appeal and the cotton-gin turning point

Walker's "wild appeal" showed how the world was changing after the cotton-gin arrived. By 1830:

  • Slavery seemed hopelessly fastened on the South
  • Slaves were thoroughly cowed into submission
  • The economic incentive (cotton) had locked in the system

🎭 The shift to assimilation demands (1830s–1850s)

🌴 West Indian influence

Free Negroes of the North, inspired by mulatto immigrants from the West Indies, began to change the basis of their demands:

  • They recognized the slavery of slaves as a separate issue
  • They insisted they themselves were freemen
  • They sought assimilation and amalgamation with the nation on the same terms as other men

👥 Key figures and their strategy

Leaders like Forten, Purvis (Philadelphia), Shad (Wilmington), Du Bois (New Haven), and Barbadoes (Boston) strove:

  • As men, not as slaves
  • As "people of color," not as "Negroes"

Don't confuse: This was not a claim for special treatment but a demand to be recognized as equal citizens already entitled to rights.

🚫 The trend refuses recognition

The trend of the times refused them recognition except in individual, exceptional cases:

  • They were considered one with all the despised blacks
  • They soon found themselves fighting just to keep rights they formerly had (voting, working, moving as freemen)
  • Migration and colonization schemes arose but were refused
  • They eventually turned to the Abolition movement as a final refuge

💪 The Douglass era of self-assertion (1850s–1876)

🦅 New period of self-development

Led by Remond, Nell, Wells-Brown, and Douglass, a new period dawned:

  • Ultimate freedom and assimilation remained the ideal
  • Main reliance: assertion of the manhood rights of the Negro by himself
  • John Brown's raid represented the extreme logic of this approach

👑 Frederick Douglass as greatest leader

Frederick Douglass: the greatest of American Negro leaders, who continued to lead after the war and emancipation.

His program:

  • Self-assertion, especially in political lines
  • Behind him came Reconstruction politicians: Elliot, Bruce, Langston
  • Less conspicuous but of greater social significance: Alexander Crummell and Bishop Daniel Payne

🌅 Douglass's consistent position

Even in old age, Douglass stood for the ideals of his early manhood:

  • Ultimate assimilation through self-assertion
  • On no other terms

This unwavering stance contrasted with later compromises.

🔄 The Revolution of 1876 and the search for new direction

📉 Suppression and shifting ideals

The Revolution of 1876 brought:

  • Suppression of Negro votes
  • Changing and shifting of ideals
  • Seeking of new lights in the great night

🕊️ Price's brief emergence

Price arose as a new leader who seemed destined to:

  • Not give up the old ideals
  • Re-state them in a form less repugnant to the white South

But he passed away in his prime before this approach could be tested.

🤝 Booker T. Washington's compromise program

🌉 A leader of two races

Washington's unique position: essentially the leader not of one race but of two—a compromiser between the South, the North, and the Negro.

Key difference from previous leaders:

  • Former leaders were chosen by silent suffrage of their fellows
  • They sought to lead their own people alone
  • They were usually little known outside their race (except Douglass)
  • Washington became a national figure bridging all groups

💼 The economic gospel in context

Washington represents the old attitude of adjustment and submission, but at a peculiar time:

Contextual factorHow it shapes Washington's program
Age of unusual economic developmentProgram takes an economic cast—a gospel of Work and Money that overshadows higher aims of life
Advanced races in closer contact with less developedRace-feeling intensified; Washington's program accepts the alleged inferiority of Negro races
Reaction from war-time sentimentIncreased race-prejudice; Washington withdraws many high demands of Negroes as men and citizens

Historical irony: In other periods of intensified prejudice, the Negro's tendency to self-assertion was called forth; at this period, a policy of submission is advocated.

📋 Washington's three-part surrender

Washington distinctly asks that black people give up, at least for the present:

  1. Political power
  2. Insistence on civil rights
  3. Higher education of Negro youth

In exchange, concentrate all energies on:

  • Industrial education
  • Accumulation of wealth
  • Conciliation of the South

This policy was advocated for over fifteen years and triumphant for perhaps ten years.

📊 The actual results of submission

As a result of this "tender of the palm-branch," what has been the return?

  1. The disfranchisement of the Negro
  2. The legal creation of a distinct status of civil inferiority for the Negro
  3. The steady withdrawal of aid from institutions for the higher training of the Negro

Important caveat: These movements are not direct results of Washington's teachings, but his propaganda has, without a shadow of doubt, helped their speedier accomplishment.

⚠️ The triple paradox

🧩 The central question

Is it possible, and probable, that nine millions of men can make effective progress in economic lines if they are deprived of political rights, made a servile caste, and allowed only the most meagre chance for developing their exceptional men?

The excerpt's answer: If history and reason give any distinct answer, it is an emphatic NO.

🔺 Three contradictions in Washington's position

🔺 Paradox 1: Property without political rights

  • He strives: to make Negro artisans, business men, and property-owners
  • The problem: it is utterly impossible, under modern competitive methods, for workingmen and property-owners to defend their rights and exist without the right of suffrage

🔺 Paradox 2: Self-respect through submission

  • He insists on: thrift and self-respect
  • But counsels: silent submission to civic inferiority
  • The consequence: such submission is bound to sap the manhood of any race in the long run

🔺 Paradox 3: Common schools without higher education

  • He advocates: common-school and industrial training
  • He depreciates: institutions of higher learning
  • The reality: neither the Negro common-schools nor Tuskegee itself could remain open a day were it not for teachers trained in Negro colleges or by their graduates

Don't confuse: Washington is not simply prioritizing economic development; he is trading away the very tools (political power, civic equality, higher education) needed to achieve and sustain economic progress.

🗣️ Two classes of critics

⚔️ The revolt faction

One class is spiritually descended from Toussaint the Savior, through Gabriel, Vesey, and Turner:

  • They represent the attitude of revolt and revenge
  • They hate the white South blindly and distrust the white race generally
  • Their proposed solution: emigration beyond the borders of the United States

🌍 The irony of emigration

Nothing has more effectually made emigration seem hopeless than the recent course of the United States toward weaker and darker peoples:

  • West Indies
  • Hawaii
  • The Philippines

The bitter question: "Where in the world may we go and be safe?"

This irony undercuts the emigration solution, leaving the critics without a clear alternative path.

53

6.17 Leslie Marmon Silko

6.17 Leslie Marmon Silko

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

The excerpt argues that African Americans must openly demand voting rights, civic equality, and full education—even if it means opposing Booker T. Washington—because silent submission and limited training cannot secure economic progress or true manhood under modern competitive conditions.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • Washington's triple paradox: he promotes economic advancement while accepting political disenfranchisement, counsels self-respect while advising submission to civic inferiority, and advocates industrial training while depending on higher education to supply teachers.
  • Two classes of critics: one advocates emigration and revenge; the other (the focus here) seeks patient but firm insistence on full rights without abandoning useful work or courtesy.
  • Core demands: the right to vote, civic equality, and education of youth according to ability—not as immediate gifts but as non-negotiable goals to be insisted upon continually.
  • Common confusion: the critics do not reject Washington's emphasis on patience, industrial training, or conciliation; they reject only his acceptance of political and civic inferiority and his depreciation of higher education.
  • Why it matters: voluntarily surrendering rights and belittling one's own people will not earn respect or progress; only firm adherence to higher ideals keeps those ideals within the realm of possibility.

🧩 Washington's triple paradox

🧩 Economic progress without political rights

Washington strives to make Negro artisans, business men, and property-owners, but under modern competitive methods it is utterly impossible for workingmen and property-owners to defend their rights and exist without the right of suffrage.

  • The excerpt argues that economic success requires the ability to defend one's interests politically.
  • Without voting rights, workers and property owners cannot protect themselves in a competitive system.
  • Example: An artisan or business owner faces legal or economic threats but has no vote to influence laws or elect protective officials.

🧩 Self-respect alongside submission

Washington insists on thrift and self-respect, but at the same time counsels a silent submission to civic inferiority such as is bound to sap the manhood of any race in the long run.

  • The paradox: urging pride and self-discipline while accepting second-class citizenship.
  • The excerpt warns that long-term acceptance of inferiority undermines the very manhood Washington seeks to build.

🧩 Industrial training without higher education

Washington advocates common-school and industrial training, and depreciates institutions of higher learning; but neither the Negro common-schools, nor Tuskegee itself, could remain open a day were it not for teachers trained in Negro colleges, or trained by their graduates.

  • Industrial and common schools depend on teachers who received higher education.
  • Deprecating colleges and universities removes the foundation for the very system Washington promotes.
  • Don't confuse: the critics support industrial training; they oppose only the dismissal of higher education as unnecessary.

🗣️ Two classes of critics

🗣️ The emigration and revenge faction

  • Spiritually descended from Toussaint, Gabriel, Vesey, and Turner.
  • They represent revolt and revenge: they hate the white South blindly, distrust the white race generally, and believe the Negro's only hope lies in emigration beyond U.S. borders.
  • The excerpt notes the irony: recent U.S. actions toward weaker and darker peoples in the West Indies, Hawaii, and the Philippines make emigration seem hopeless—"where in the world may we go and be safe from lying and brute force?"

🗣️ The patient but firm critics

  • This group has "hitherto said little aloud."
  • They dislike internal disagreement and do not want their criticism of Washington to become an excuse for venom from small-minded opponents.
  • Nevertheless, they feel conscience-bound to speak because the questions are fundamental and serious.
  • Representatives mentioned: the Grimkes, Kelly Miller, J. W. E. Bowen, and others.

🎯 The three core demands

🎯 What the critics ask

The excerpt lists three things this group feels bound to ask of the nation:

  1. The right to vote.
  2. Civic equality.
  3. The education of youth according to ability.

🎯 Clarifications and qualifications

  • They acknowledge Washington's invaluable service in counseling patience and courtesy.
  • They do not ask that ignorant black men vote when ignorant whites are barred, or that reasonable restrictions on suffrage be removed.
  • They know the low social level of the mass of the race is responsible for much discrimination.
  • But they also know—and the nation knows—that relentless color-prejudice is more often a cause than a result of the Negro's degradation.
  • They seek the abatement of this "relic of barbarism," not its systematic encouragement by all agencies of social power from the Associated Press to the Church of Christ.

🎯 Educational system requirements

  • They advocate, with Washington, a broad system of Negro common schools supplemented by thorough industrial training.
  • But they insist that no such educational system ever has rested or can rest on any basis other than well-equipped colleges and universities.
  • They insist there is a demand for a few such institutions throughout the South to train the best Negro youth as teachers, professional men, and leaders.

🛤️ The path to progress

🛤️ Honesty over flattery

The way to truth and right lies in straightforward honesty, not in indiscriminate flattery; in praising those of the South who do well and criticising uncompromisingly those who do ill.

  • The critics accept the "Atlanta Compromise" in its broadest interpretation.
  • They recognize many signs of promise and many men of high purpose and fair judgment in the South.
  • But they reject indiscriminate flattery and insist on honest, discriminating criticism.

🛤️ Firm adherence to higher ideals

  • They do not expect voting rights, civic rights, and education to come in a moment.
  • They do not expect bias and prejudices of years to disappear at the blast of a trumpet.
  • But they are absolutely certain: the way for a people to gain reasonable rights is not by voluntarily throwing them away and insisting they do not want them.
  • The way to gain respect is not by continually belittling and ridiculing themselves.
  • On the contrary: Negroes must insist continually, in season and out of season, that voting is necessary to modern manhood, that color discrimination is barbarism, and that black boys need education as well as white boys.

🛤️ The responsibility to oppose

  • In failing to state plainly and unequivocally the legitimate demands of their people—even at the cost of opposing an honored leader—the thinking classes of American Negroes would shirk a heavy responsibility.
  • This responsibility is to themselves, to the struggling masses, to the darker races of men whose future depends on this American experiment, and especially to the nation—this common Fatherland.
  • It is wrong to encourage a man or a people in evil-doing; it is wrong to aid and abet a national crime simply because it is unpopular not to do so.

🛤️ Reconciliation without injustice

  • The growing spirit of kindliness and reconciliation between North and South after the war ought to be a source of deep congratulation, especially to those whose mistreatment caused the war.
  • But if that reconciliation is to be marked by the industrial slavery and civic death of those same black men, with permanent legislation into a position of inferiority, then those black men—if they are really men—are called upon by every consideration of patriotism and loyalty to oppose such a course by all civilized methods.
  • "We have no right to sit silently by while the inevitable seeds are sown for a harvest of disaster to our children, black and white."

🔍 Judging the South discriminatingly

🔍 Not a monolithic South

The South is not "solid"; it is a land in the ferment of social change, wherein forces of all kinds are fighting for supremacy.

  • The present generation of Southerners are not responsible for the past and should not be blindly hated or blamed.
  • To no class is the indiscriminate endorsement of the recent course of the South toward Negroes more nauseating than to the best thought of the South.
  • To praise the ill the South is perpetrating is just as wrong as to condemn the good.

🔍 Diverse Southern attitudes

The excerpt identifies several Southern white attitudes toward blacks:

GroupAttitude
Ignorant SouthernerHates the Negro
WorkingmenFear his competition
Money-makersWish to use him as a laborer
Some of the educatedSee a menace in his upward development
Others (usually sons of masters)Wish to help him to rise
  • National opinion has enabled this last class to [excerpt ends here].

🔍 What the South needs

  • Discriminating and broad-minded criticism is what the South needs.
  • It needs this for the sake of its own white sons and daughters, and for the insurance of robust, healthy mental and moral development.
  • Don't confuse: criticism is not hatred; the excerpt calls for discriminating judgment, not blanket condemnation.
54

6.18 David Foster Wallace

6.18 David Foster Wallace

🧭 Overview

🧠 One-sentence thesis

The excerpt does not contain content about David Foster Wallace; instead, it presents W.E.B. Du Bois's critique of Booker T. Washington's approach to racial progress and the responsibilities of both Black Americans and the nation in addressing racial injustice.

📌 Key points (3–5)

  • Core disagreement: Du Bois argues that reconciliation between North and South should not come at the cost of Black civic death and industrial slavery, even if opposing this means disagreeing with Booker T. Washington.
  • Discriminating judgment: The South is not monolithic—different groups (ignorant, working-class, money-makers, educated) hold varying attitudes toward Black Americans, requiring nuanced criticism rather than blanket praise or condemnation.
  • Dangerous half-truths: Washington's propaganda implies the South is justified, that wrong education caused Black failure, and that Black people must rise primarily through their own efforts—each a half-truth that omits slavery, race prejudice, and the nation's responsibility.
  • Common confusion: Supporting Washington's emphasis on thrift, patience, and industrial training does not mean accepting his apologetics for injustice or his undervaluing of voting rights and higher education.
  • National burden: The problem belongs to the nation, not solely to Black Americans; both North and South share guilt and responsibility for righting these wrongs.

🧩 The context of reconciliation and opposition

🤝 Reconciliation at what cost?

  • The excerpt acknowledges the "growing spirit of kindliness and reconciliation between the North and South after the frightful difference of a generation ago" (the Civil War).
  • However, Du Bois warns that if reconciliation means "industrial slavery and civic death" for Black Americans with "permanent legislation into a position of inferiority," then Black men must oppose it "by all civilized methods."
  • The opposition is framed as patriotic duty, not disloyalty.

⚖️ The duty to judge discriminatingly

"It is the duty of black men to judge the South discriminatingly."

  • The present generation of Southerners should not be blindly hated for the past.
  • Indiscriminate endorsement of the South's recent course toward Black people is "nauseating" even to "the best thought of the South."
  • The South is "not 'solid'"; it is "a land in the ferment of social change, wherein forces of all kinds are fighting for supremacy."
  • Don't confuse: Praising all of the South or condemning all of it are both wrong; discriminating criticism is needed for the South's own development and for robust moral growth.

🗺️ The complexity of Southern attitudes

🧑‍🤝‍🧑 Different groups, different views

The excerpt maps out how various Southern white groups view Black Americans:

GroupAttitude toward Black Americans
Ignorant SouthernersHate the Negro
WorkingmenFear his competition
Money-makersWish to use him as a laborer
Some educatedSee a menace in his upward development
Others (usually sons of masters)Wish to help him rise

🏫 Consequences of these attitudes

  • National opinion has enabled the last group (those who wish to help) to maintain Negro common schools and partially protect Black people in property, life, and limb.
  • Money-makers' pressure puts Black people in danger of semi-slavery, especially in rural districts.
  • Workingmen and fearful educated have united to disfranchise Black people; some urge deportation.
  • Ignorant passions are easily aroused to lynch and abuse any Black man.

🎯 The imperative duty

  • To praise this "intricate whirl of thought and prejudice is nonsense."
  • To condemn "the South" indiscriminately is unjust.
  • The duty of thinking Black men is to use nuanced judgment: "praising Governor Aycock, exposing Senator Morgan, arguing with Mr. Thomas Nelson Page, and denouncing Senator Ben Tillman" in the same breath.
  • Example: Recognize and support those who help while exposing and opposing those who harm—do not treat all Southern whites as identical.

⚠️ Washington's dangerous half-truths

📢 Washington's overall impression

Du Bois acknowledges that Washington has sometimes opposed unjust movements (sent memorials to Louisiana and Alabama constitutional conventions, spoken against lynching, set his influence against sinister schemes).

However, the "distinct impression left by Mr. Washington's propaganda" consists of three propositions:

  1. The South is justified in its present attitude toward Black people because of Black degradation.
  2. The prime cause of Black failure to rise more quickly is wrong education in the past.
  3. Black future rise depends primarily on their own efforts.

"Each of these propositions is a dangerous half-truth."

🔍 The supplementary truths

Du Bois insists on "supplementary truths" that must never be lost:

Washington's half-truthSupplementary truth Du Bois adds
South justified by Black degradationSlavery and race-prejudice are potent (if not sufficient) causes of Black position
Wrong education caused failureIndustrial and common-school training were necessarily slow because they required Black teachers trained by higher institutions; Tuskegee was unthinkable before 1880
Black people must strive on their ownUnless Black striving is "not simply seconded, but rather aroused and encouraged" by the richer and wiser surrounding group, great success is impossible

🎯 The core criticism

  • Washington fails to realize and impress the last point (the need for initiative from the richer and wiser group).
  • His doctrine has made whites "North and South, shift the burden of the Negro problem to the Negro's shoulders and stand aside as critical and rather pessimistic spectators."
  • In fact, "the burden belongs to the nation, and the hands of none of us are clean if we bend not our energies to righting these great wrongs."

🛤️ The path forward: selective support and opposition

🤝 Where to support Washington

"So far as Mr. Washington preaches Thrift, Patience, and Industrial Training for the masses, we must hold up his hands and strive with him, rejoicing in his honors and glorying in the strength of this Joshua called of God and of man to lead the headless host."

  • Du Bois does not reject Washington entirely.
  • Support is appropriate for practical economic training and virtues for the masses.

🚫 Where to oppose Washington

"But so far as Mr. Washington apologizes for injustice, North or South, does not rightly value the privilege and duty of voting, belittles the emasculating effects of caste distinctions, and opposes the higher training and ambition of our brighter minds,—so far as he, the South, or the Nation, does this,—we must unceasingly and firmly oppose them."

Du Bois identifies four areas requiring opposition:

  1. Apologizing for injustice (North or South)
  2. Not rightly valuing voting (the privilege and duty)
  3. Belittling caste distinctions (their emasculating effects)
  4. Opposing higher training (and ambition of brighter minds)

🇺🇸 The moral stakes

  • The South should be led by "candid and honest criticism" to assert her better self and do her full duty to the race she has wronged.
  • The North, "her co-partner in guilt," cannot salve her conscience "by plastering it with gold."
  • The problem cannot be settled "by diplomacy and suaveness, by 'policy' alone."
  • Du Bois asks: "If worse come to worst, can the moral fibre of this country survive the slow throttling and murder of nine millions of men?"

📜 The appeal to founding principles

The excerpt closes by invoking the Declaration of Independence:

"By every civilized and peaceful method we must strive for the rights which the world accords to men, clinging unwaveringly to those great words which the sons of the Fathers would fain forget: '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.'"

  • The method is "civilized and peaceful."
  • The goal is rights "which the world accords to men."
  • The foundation is the nation's own founding document, which some wish to forget.

📚 Note on excerpt content

Important: The title of this section is "6.18 David Foster Wallace," but the excerpt contains no content about David Foster Wallace. Instead, it presents:

  • W.E.B. Du Bois's essay "Of Mr. Booker T. Washington and Others" (from The Souls of Black Folk)
  • A brief mention of historian Frederick Jackson Turner and the closing of the American frontier (in the Zane Grey section)

The notes above faithfully reflect the excerpt's actual content, which concerns early 20th-century debates over Black American civil rights and progress.