literature, art and abolition

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Literature, Art and Abolition

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Literature, Art and Abolition. Women of the 19 th Century. Not allowed to vote They could be beaten by husbands Once they were married, a woman couldn’t own property Stereotyped as physically and mentally weak and the keepers of society. Women of the 19 th Century. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Literature, Art and Abolition

Literature, Art and Abolition

Page 2: Literature, Art and Abolition

Women of the 19th Century

• Not allowed to vote• They could be beaten by husbands• Once they were married, a woman couldn’t

own property• Stereotyped as physically and mentally weak

and the keepers of society

Page 3: Literature, Art and Abolition

Women of the 19th Century

• Reformers – white well to do – Lucretia Mott – fought for anti slavery, but wasn’t

recognized at the London Anti-slavery conference– Elizabeth Cady Stanton – left out obey in marriage

vows, fought for woman’s suffrage– Susan B. Anthony – woman’s rights– Elizabeth Blackwell – 1st female graduate of

medical college– Margaret Fuller – edited a journal

Page 4: Literature, Art and Abolition

Women of the 19th Century

• Reformers cont.– Sarah and Angelina Grimke – anti – slavery– Lucy Stone – didn’t take her husband’s name– Amelia Bloomer – wore short skirt and “bloomers”

Page 5: Literature, Art and Abolition

The Seneca Falls Women’s Rights Convention, 1848

Page 6: Literature, Art and Abolition

The first signatures on the Declaration of

Sentiments.

“. . . The history of mankind is a history of repeated injuries and usurpations on the part of man toward woman, having in direct object the establishment of an absolute tyranny over her. . . . He has never permitted her to exercise her inalienable right to the elective franchise. He has compelled her to submit to laws, in the formation of which she has no voice. . .”

Elizabeth Cady Stanton,

The Declaration of Sentiments

Page 7: Literature, Art and Abolition

The radical abolition movement had the greatest impact on women’s rights.

Page 8: Literature, Art and Abolition

Women in the abolition movement recognized parallels between the legal condition of slaves and that of women.

Page 9: Literature, Art and Abolition

Utopian Societies

• New Harmony – Robert Owen 1825• Brook Farm – Massachusetts,

transcendentalism, “living plain and thinking high”

• Oneida – New York, complex marriage• Shakers – religious community, prohibited

marriage and sex…it didn’t last long

Page 10: Literature, Art and Abolition

New Harmony

Page 11: Literature, Art and Abolition

New Harmony

Page 13: Literature, Art and Abolition

Brook Farm

Page 14: Literature, Art and Abolition

Oneida

Page 15: Literature, Art and Abolition

Oneida

Page 16: Literature, Art and Abolition

Oneida

Page 17: Literature, Art and Abolition

Shakers

Page 18: Literature, Art and Abolition

Shakers

Page 19: Literature, Art and Abolition

Literature and Art• Built Nationalism

• Why?

• Hudson River School – totally unique style of painting, focused on wild American

landscape. – Captured the “American Pioneering Spirit” (Manifest Destiny). – “Landscape Painting”.

Page 20: Literature, Art and Abolition

Literature

Romanticism• Writing style that focused on:

emotion, religion, man v. nature• Examples:• Washington Irving- Sleepy

Hollow, Rip Van Winkle- 1st American Folktales.

• Nathaniel Hawthorne- Scarlet Letter

• James Fennimore Cooper- Last of the Mohicans

• Edgar Allen Poe- The Raven

Transcendentalism• Writing Style and Philosophy

focused on: emotion, promoted self-reliance (individualism)

• Examples:• Ralph Waldo Emerson- Essayist

and Poet• Henry David Thoreau- Walden

and Civil Disobedience (promoted nonviolent protest, MLK Jr. and Gandhi)

Page 21: Literature, Art and Abolition

Slavery in the North and South

• Nat Turner’s Rebellion– Preacher– Killed 60 people in VA (mostly women and

children)– Payback was bloody– This made Southern slaveholders scared

Page 22: Literature, Art and Abolition

American Colonization Society• Return African-Americans to Africa

Page 23: Literature, Art and Abolition

William Lloyd Garrison

• The Liberator – anti slavery newspaper

Page 24: Literature, Art and Abolition

Sojourner Truth

• Free African-American who fought for emancipation and women’s rights

Page 25: Literature, Art and Abolition

Frederick Douglass

• Former slave• Published the North Star newspaper

Page 26: Literature, Art and Abolition

Slavery – “The Peculiar Institution”

North• Made $ off slavery

South• Made $ off slavery

Page 27: Literature, Art and Abolition

Free Soil Party

• Wanted to stop the expansion of slavery in the west