The Significance of Native Indian Presence in American Literature

Authors

  • Manouri K. Jayasinghe Senior Lecturer (Higher Grade), SLIIT University, Sri Lanka

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.51983/arss-2022.11.1.3067

Keywords:

American Literature, Native Indians, Status change, American war of 1812

Abstract

The image of the Native Indian, was used on both sides of the Atlantic for many years but subsequent to the American war waged against Great Britain in 1812, the Native Indian image was given a previously unseen prominence in American literary works, and this lasted for almost half a century. The reason for this swift change of status of the Native Indians is revealed through the present paper. The works of Irving, Cooper, Longfellow, Hawthorne, and Melville have been referred to in order to strengthen my premise. Hawthorne and Melville use a  technique different from the other authors who focus directly on the Native Indians thus proving their importance in American literature of the early 19th century. In The Scarlet Letter and Moby-Dick or The Whale, the respective authors, Hawthorne and Melville bring out the importance of the Native Indians through the almost imperceptible presence of the Native Indians. To understand this, a basic understanding of the plots being required, the storylines of the novels are concisely unfolded through a narrative analysis deriving from a qualitative approach. This enables the reader to understand Hawthorne and Melville’s approach to establishing the significance of the Native Indians and their sudden boost in status in the American literary sphere.

References

Berkhofer, R. F. (1979). The white man’s Indian. New York: Random House, Vintage Books.

Bercovitch, S. (Ed.). (1974). The American Puritan imagination - Essays in revaluation. New York and London: Cambridge University Press.

Eaton, C., & Modugno, R. Hawthorne in Salem. Retrieved from http://www.hawthorneinsalem.org/page/11412.

Hawthorne, N. (1994). The Scarlet Letter. England, London: Penguin Popular Classics.

Heath, W. (1995). The irreverent imagination; Hawthorne and The Scarlet letter. Conference: American Studies Lecture Series, Emmitsberg.

Honour, H. (1975). The new golden land: European images of America from the discoveries to the present times. New York: Pantheon.

Niemeyer, M. (2015). From Savage to Sublime (And Partway Back): Indians and Antiquity in Early Nineteenth-Century American Literature, Transatlantica, 2. Retrieved from http://journals.openedition.org/transatlantica/7727, DOI: https://doi.org/10.4000/transatlantica.7727.

Melville, H. (1992). Moby-Dick or The Whale. New York: Penguin Books.

Noyes, N. (1698). New England’s Duty and Interest. Retrieved from http://name.umdl.umich.edu/n00704.0001.001.

Sanford, C. L. (1961). Quest for paradise: Europe and the American moral imagination. University of Illinois Press.

Spencer, B. T. (1957). The quest for nationality: an American literary campaign. Syracuse University Press.

Downloads

Published

15-05-2022

How to Cite

Jayasinghe, M. K. (2022). The Significance of Native Indian Presence in American Literature. Asian Review of Social Sciences, 11(1), 59–62. https://doi.org/10.51983/arss-2022.11.1.3067