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The First Day of Class Goals and Expectations:
Make students a little comfortable Make students a little uncomfortable Encourage student engagement with course
content and with each other Present course as a field of inquiry Present competing narratives Guide students in analysis of visual and verbal
representations of early America Model inquiry Model conflict negotiation
Meeting Goals, Setting Expectations Things I usually do first:
tell students what to call me. pose a question.
Some things I usually don't do: I often don't take attendance or hand out the
syllabus first. (I hand it out near the end of the first class, and I post it to Blackboard.)
And I sometimes don't begin with a literary text.
Frederick Church Twilight in the Wilderness (1860) Cleveland Museum of Art Mr. and Mrs. William H. Marlatt Fund
Thomas Hariot"A Briefe and True Report
of the New Found Land of Virginia." Frankfort: Theodore De Bry (1590)
John White "Indian Man and Woman Eating" Watercolor drawing (created 1585-1586).
Some Guiding Questionsfor the Semester
What is America? Who are the American heroes? What is a frontier? Whose frontier is it? Is there a conflict between the individual and
nature? Or the individual and society? If so, how does literature reflect or respond to
this conflict? What is your connection to American literature? How do you “see” America?
Frontispiece and Title PagePoems on Various Subjects, Religious and MoralEngraving attributed to Scipio Moorhead (1773)
“On Being Brought from Africa to America”
'Twas mercy brought me from my Pagan land,Taught my benighted soul to understandThat there's a God, that there's a Saviour too:Once I redemption neither sought nor knew.
5 Some view our sable race with scornful eye,"Their colour is a diabolic die."Remember, Christians, Negros, black as Cain,May be refin'd, and join th' angelic train.
http://www.vcu.edu/engweb/webtexts/Wheatley/brought.html
Where can you find more information? You can start onlineEvaluate sources carefully…
American Treasures of the Library of Congress
On September 1, 1773, Phillis Wheatley's Poems on Various Subjects, Religious and Moral was published in London, England. Wheatley's collection was the first volume of poetry by an African-American poet to be published. Regarded as a prodigy by her contemporaries, Wheatley was approximately twenty at the time of the book's publication.
Born in the Senegambia region of West Africa, she was sold into slavery and transported to Boston at age seven or eight. Purchased off the slave ship by prosperous merchant John Wheatley and his wife Susanna in 1761, the young Phillis was soon copying the English alphabet on a wall in chalk.
Looking Back Digital Collection DeBry Engravings Repository University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill. Library. North Carolina Collection.
Related Resource The full text of Thomas Hariot's "A Briefe and True Report of the New Found Land of Virginia" is available online through Documenting the American South at http://docsouth.unc.edu/nc/hariot/menu.htm
Thinking Ahead: Whose frontier is it anyway?
James Fenimore Cooper Last of the Mohicans (1826)
http://etext.virginia.edu/toc/modeng/public/CooMohi.html
Electronic Text Center, University of Virginia Library