This section contains 8,976 words (approx. 30 pages at 300 words per page) |
SOURCE: Samuels, Shirley. “Wieland: Alien and Infidel.” Early American Literature 25, no. 1 (1990): 46-66.
In the following essay, Samuels explores the connections between family and nation and the threat to both from outsiders as a prominent theme of Wieland.
An eighteenth-century New England minister who wrote a history of the American Revolution once described the need to “dress” his history modestly: “laboured elegance and extravagant colouring only brings her into suspicion, hides her beauty, and makes the cautious reader afraid lest he is in company with a painted harlot” (Gordon 393). While it seems understandable that a minister would not want his reader to keep “company with a painted harlot,” the conjunction of history and harlotry here appears rather striking. Such nervousness about licentious sexuality in language—specifically language that depicted the still-volatile topic of the American Revolution—extended to other writers, ministers, orators, and politicians in the young republic. They...
This section contains 8,976 words (approx. 30 pages at 300 words per page) |