Posted: September 16th, 2017

LITR220

LITR220

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Part 1 (1 Page long): We see in “Rip Van Winkle” themes of generational change, continuity, preservation, and tradition. Written nearly half a century after the

American Revolution, in “Rip Van Winkle” Irving is making a statement about the Revolution. What is it Washington Irving is trying to convey to the reader through his

story? Do any of the surrounding characters have roles or represent themes related to the Revolution? If so, what might those be?

Part 2 (1 page long): James Fenimore Cooper challenges the reader to consider who really owns the land and its natural resources. What evidence is in there of natural

law versus human law? What can we say about individual freedoms versus the ideal of equal opportunities protected by the institutions of a justly ordered society?

Express these juxtapositions using lines from the reading as support. And then please add your opinion of ownership and conservation, law, and freedoms.

193
Week Eight: Reason and
Revolution Part III / The
Romantic, the Real and the
American Indian
Perkins-Perkins:
Selections from American
Literature
Washington Irving Author Bio © The McGraw-Hill
Companies, 2003
Washington Irving
(1783–1859) RWith Cooper, Poe, and Hawthorne, Irving has survived all other American writers of fiction before

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