The first important fiction writers widely recognized today,
Charles Brockden Brown, Washington Irving, and James Fenimore
Cooper, used American subjects, historical perspectives, themes of
change, and nostalgic tones. They wrote in many prose genres,
initiated new forms, and found new ways to make a living through
literature. With them, American literature began to be read and
appreciated in the United States and abroad.
Charles Brockden Brown (1771-1810)
Already mentioned as the first professional American writer,
Charles Brockden Brown was inspired by the English writers Mrs.
Radcliffe and English William Godwin. (Radcliffe was known for her
terrifying Gothic novels; a novelist and social reformer, Godwin
was the father of Mary Shelley, who wrote Frankenstein and married
English poet Percy Bysshe Shelley.)
Driven by poverty, Brown hastily penned four haunting novels in two
years: Wieland (1798), Arthur Mervyn (1799), Ormond (1799), and
Edgar Huntley (1799). In them, he developed the genre of American
Gothic. The Gothic novel was a popular genre of the day featuring
exotic and wild settings, disturbing psychological depth, and much
suspense. Trappings included ruined castles or abbeys, ghosts,
mysterious secrets, threatening figures, and solitary maidens who
survive by their wits and spiritual strength. At their best, such
novels offer tremendous suspense and hints of magic, along with
profound explorations of the human soul in extremity. Critics
suggest that Brown's Gothic sensibility expresses deep anxieties
about the inadequate social institutions of the new nation.
Brown used distinctively American settings. A man of ideas, he
dramatized scientific theories, developed a personal theory of
fiction, and championed high literary standards despite personal
poverty. Though flawed, his works are darkly powerful.
Increasingly, he is seen as the precursor of romantic writers like
Edgar Allan Poe, Herman Melville, and Nathaniel Hawthorne. He
expresses subconscious fears that the outwardly optimistic
Enlightenment period drove underground.
Washington Irving (1789-1859)
The youngest of 11 children born to a well-to-do New York merchant
family, Washington Irving became a cultural and diplomatic
ambassador to Europe, like Benjamin Franklin and Nathaniel
Hawthorne. Despite his talent, he probably would not have become a
full-time professional writer, given the lack of financial rewards,
if a series of fortuitous incidents had not thrust writing as a
profession upon him. Through friends, he was able to publish his
Sketch Book (1819-1820) simultaneously in England and America,
obtaining copyrights and payment in both countries.
The Sketch Book of Geoffrye Crayon (Irving's pseudonym) contains
his two best remembered stories, "Rip Van Winkle" and "The Legend
of Sleepy Hollow." "Sketch" aptly describes Irving's delicate,
elegant, yet seemingly casual style, and "crayon" suggests his
ability as a colorist or creator of rich, nuanced tones and
emotional effects. In the Sketch Book, Irving transforms the
Catskill Mountains along the Hudson River north of New York City
into a fabulous, magical region.
American readers gratefully accepted Irving's imagined "history" of
the Catskills, despite the fact (unknown to them) that he had
adapted his stories from a German source. Irving gave America
something it badly needed in the brash, materialistic early years:
an imaginative way of relating to the new land.
No writer was as successful as Irving at humanizing the land,
endowing it with a name and a face and a set of legends. The story
of "Rip Van Winkle," who slept for 20 years, waking to find the
colonies had become independent, eventually became folklore. It was
adapted for the stage, went into the oral tradition, and was
gradually accepted as authentic American legend by generations of
Americans.
Irving discovered and helped satisfy the raw new nation's sense of
history. His numerous works may be seen as his devoted attempts to
build the new nation's soul by recreating history and giving it
living, breathing, imaginative life. For subjects, he chose the
most dramatic aspects of American history: the discovery of the New
World, the first president and national hero, and the westward
exploration. His earliest work was a sparkling, satirical History
of New York (1809) under the Dutch, ostensibly written by Diedrich
Knickerbocker (hence the name of Irving's friends and New York
writers of the day, the "Knickerbocker School").
James Fenimore Cooper (1789-1851)
James Fenimore Cooper, like Irving, evoked a sense of the past and
gave it a local habitation and a name.
In Cooper, though, one finds
the powerful myth of a golden age and the poignance of its loss.
While Irving and other American writers before and after him
scoured Europe in search of its legends, castles, and great themes,
Cooper grasped the essential myth of America: that it was timeless,
like the wilderness. American history was a trespass on the
eternal; European history in America was a reenactment of the fall
in the Garden of Eden. The cyclical realm of nature was glimpsed
only in the act of destroying it: The wilderness disappeared in
front of American eyes, vanishing before the oncoming pioneers like
a mirage. This is Cooper's basic tragic vision of the ironic
destruction of the wilderness, the new Eden that had attracted the
colonists in the first place.
Personal experience enabled Cooper to write vividly of the
transformation of the wilderness and of other subjects such as the
sea and the clash of peoples from different cultures. The son of a
Quaker family, he grew up on his father's remote estate at Otsego
Lake (now Cooperstown) in central New York State. Although this
area was relatively peaceful during Cooper's boyhood, it had once
been the scene of an Indian massacre. Young Fenimore Cooper grew up
in an almost feudal environment. His father, Judge Cooper, was a
landowner and leader. Cooper saw frontiersmen and Indians at Otsego
Lake as a boy; in later life, bold white settlers intruded on his
land.
Natty Bumppo, Cooper's renowned literary character, embodies his
vision of the frontiersman as a gentleman, a Jeffersonian "natural
aristocrat." Early in 1823, in The Pioneers, Cooper had begun to
discover Bumppo. Natty is the first famous frontiersman in American
literature and the literary forerunner of countless cowboy and
backwoods heroes. He is the idealized, upright individualist who is
better than the society he protects. Poor and isolated, yet pure,
he is a touchstone for ethical values and prefigures Herman
Melville's Billy Budd and Mark Twain's Huck Finn.
Based in part on the real life of American pioneer Daniel Boone --
who was a Quaker like Cooper -- Natty Bumppo, an outstanding
woodsman like Boone, was a peaceful man adopted by an Indian tribe.
Both Boone and the fictional Bumppo loved nature and freedom. They
constantly kept moving west to escape the oncoming settlers they
had guided into the wilderness, and they became legends in their
own lifetimes. Natty is also chaste, high-minded, and deeply
spiritual: He is the Christian knight of medieval romances
transposed to the virgin forest and rocky soil of America.
The unifying thread of the five novels collectively known as the
Leather-Stocking Tales is the life of Natty Bumppo. Cooper's finest
achievement, they constitute a vast prose epic with the North
American continent as setting, Indian tribes as characters, and
great wars and westward migration as social background. The novels
bring to life frontier America from 1740 to 1804.
Cooper's novels portray the successive waves of the frontier
settlement: the original wilderness inhabited by Indians; the
arrival of the first whites as scouts, soldiers, traders, and
frontiersmen; the coming of the poor, rough settler families; and
the final arrival of the middle class, bringing the first
professionals -- the judge, the physician, and the banker. Each
incoming wave displaced the earlier: Whites displaced the Indians,
who retreated westward; the "civilized" middle classes who erected
schools, churches, and jails displaced the lower- class
individualistic frontier folk, who moved further west, in turn
displacing the Indians who had preceded them. Cooper evokes the
endless, inevitable wave of settlers, seeing not only the gains but
the losses.
Cooper's novels reveal a deep tension between the lone individual
and society, nature and culture, spirituality and organized
religion. In Cooper, the natural world and the Indian are
fundamentally good -- as is the highly civilized realm associated
with his most cultured characters. Intermediate characters are
often suspect, especially greedy, poor white settlers who are too
uneducated or unrefined to appreciate nature or culture. Like
Rudyard Kipling, E.M. Forster, Herman Melville, and other sensitive
observers of widely varied cultures interacting with each other,
Cooper was a cultural relativist. He understood that no culture had
a monopoly on virtue or refinement.
Cooper accepted the American condition while Irving did not. Irving
addressed the American setting as a European might have -- by
importing and adapting European legends, culture, and history.
Cooper took the process a step farther. He created American
settings and new, distinctively American characters and themes. He
was the first to sound the recurring tragic note in American
fiction.
WRITERS OF FICTION
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