American Protest Literature: From the Revolution Through Today
Overview
Protest Literature in the United States
The United States is a protest nation. From the Declaration of Independence to the present day, American politics and culture have been profoundly shaped by small acts of protest, mass mobilizations, and sustained movement organizing. This has come in a wide variety of forms: conservative and progressive, sweeping and incremental, violent and peaceful, individual and collective. Indeed, American history is a people’s history and dissent has been the engine—the lifeblood—of American democracy.
History of Protest Literature in the United States
Writers and other artist-activists have played a key role in this. This wide-ranging lecture examines a sampling of texts from the rich tradition of protest literature in the United States: from the American Revolution to the present day. Drawn from Professor McCarthy’s immensely popular and award-winning course at Harvard University, his lecture will examine the links between literary representation and historical forms of protest, the various rhetorical strategies—shock value, empathy, and symbolic action—that these artists and texts employ, and the impact of protest literature on American politics and culture.
Suggested Readings about American Protest Literature:
- The Radical Reader: A Documentary Anthology of the American Radical Tradition, Timothy Patrick McCarthy and John McMillian, eds.
- American Protest Literature, Zoe Trodd, ed.
- Protest Nation: Words That Inspired a Century of American Radicalism, Timothy Patrick McCarthy and John McMillian, eds.
- Pamphlets of Protest: An Anthology of Early African-American Protest, 1790-1860, Richard Newman, Patrick Rael, and Phillip Lapsansky, eds.
- Building the Wall: The Play and Commentary, by Robert Schenkkan
Discussion Questions from this American Protest Literature Course
- What is “protest literature,” and how might we define it?
- How do protest artists use “shock value,” “empathy,” and “symbolic action?”
- How has protest literature changed over time?
- What impact has protest literature had on American politics and culture?
- What do you consider to be a good example of protest literature—historically and/or today?
Learn More About American Protest Literature
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