Evansville Vanderburgh Public Library

Letters from an American farmer ; and, Sketches of eighteenth-century America

Label
Letters from an American farmer ; and, Sketches of eighteenth-century America
Language
eng
Index
no index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Letters from an American farmer ; and, Sketches of eighteenth-century America
Nature of contents
dictionaries
Series statement
The Penguin American library
Summary
Hector St. John de Crvëcoeur (1735-1813), a French-American writer, was responsible for the first American novel deemed successful throughout Europe. With "Letters From an American Farmer", Crvëcoeur depicted the newly settled America as a country, and not just a system of colonies. This epistolary novel gave America an identity, expounding on the concept of The American Dream, with its themes of equal opportunity and self-determination, while also exploring the damage and conflict caused by slavery, an institution to which Crvëcoeur was strongly opposed. "Letters From an American Farmer" begins idealistically, the first few letters written in an idealistic tone, then expands to paint a full and vivid picture of a society in a state of turmoil, ravaged by civilization. This work has been translated into several languages, a landmark literary achievement, as it helped transform the "New World" into America in the minds of Europeans
Target audience
adult
Classification
Content