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Terms and People to Know Jonathan Edwards This selection pigeonholes him as an old school Puritan. He was. But he was also, unlike earlier Puritans, interested in the world around him, and interested in science, etc. Part of what was called the Great Awakening between the 1730s and 1740s Three parts of a typical Puritan sermon: 1) text is announced Today? Glenn Beck 8/27/10 “Mr. Beck made a surprise visit on Friday to a convention held by FreedomWorks, a Tea Party umbrella group, for Tea Party supporters.” “My role, as I see it, is to wake America up to the backsliding of principles and values and most of all of God,” he said. “We are a country of God. As I look at the problems in our country quite honestly I think the hot breath of destruction is breathing on our necks and to fix it politically is a figure that I don’t see anywhere” (qtd. in ZERNIKE and HULSE) Zernike, Kate and Carl Hulse. “In Washington, a Call for Religious Rebirth.” New York Times 28 August 2010. Web. 28 August 2010. "On Being Brought from Africa to America "
Remember, Christians, Negroes, black as Cain, "Thoughts on the Works of Providence "
Jonathan Edwards (written 1741) "Sinners in the Hand of an Angry God"
Scheick, William J. "Early Anglo-American Poetry: Genre, Voice, Art, and Representation." Teaching the Literatures of Early America . Ed. Carla Mulford. New York : MLA, 1999. 187-199. Print. "Emblems [ . . .] are concrete instance of how Puritans read nature as liber mundi (creation as a divinely inspired text that reiterates Scripture). Emblems tend to have layers of signification, and so students with some knowledge of the Bible might be encouraged to think further about verticality (the trees) and horizontalness (the river) in "Contemplations." IN this poem, with the same number o stanzas as Christ's age at his crucifixion, the two natural types of river and trees emblematically suggest the intersection of the divine (eternal) and the human (temporal) on Christ's cross (Scheick)" (Scheick 189) "To highlight Wheatley's regard for personal liberty and her esteem for Holy Writ, I ask students to interpret the elliptical last two lines: "Remember, Christians, Negroes , black as Cain / May be refin'd, and join th'Angelic train" (lines 7-8). Some read the lines as "Remember, Christians, [that] Negroes ," whereas others read them as "Remember, [that] Christians, [and] Negroes ." Does the final line refer only to intellectual and aesthetic refinement, such as the poet's careful management of metrics and rhyme, or does it also possible refer to the management of the ambiguous syntax of the preceding line to imply the equality of both races as mutually 'benighted soul[s]'" (line 2)?" (Scheick 193). © 2009 David Bordelon
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