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  1. May 24, 2024 · News and commentary on interracial crime, race differences, white advocacy, Third World immigration, anti-white racism, and white identity.

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      The 20th American Renaissance conference. By AR Staff. H. R....

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      ‘American History X’ at 25. April 23, 2024. How predictive...

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  2. American Renaissance, period from the 1830s roughly until the end of the American Civil War in which American literature, in the wake of the Romantic movement, came of age as an expression of a national spirit. The literary scene of the period was dominated by a group of New England writers, the.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. The phrase “American Renaissance” was introduced in 1941 by the critic F. O. Matthiessen, who identified the period from 1850 to 1855 as an “extraordinarily concentrated moment of literary expression.” 1 These years saw the publication of Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter, The House of the Seven Gables, and The Blithedale ...

  4. The American Renaissance was a period of American architecture and the arts from 1876 to 1917, [1] characterized by renewed national self-confidence and a feeling that the United States was the heir to Greek democracy, Roman law, and Renaissance humanism. The era spans the period between the Centennial Exposition (celebrating the 100th ...

  5. The American Renaissance period in American literature ran from about 1830 to around the Civil War. [1] A central term in American studies, the American Renaissance was for a while considered synonymous with American Romanticism [2] and was closely associated with Transcendentalism. [3]

  6. Jan 4, 2022 · It is now generally agreed that the American Renaissance extended at least as far back as the publications of Emerson’s early writings, in the 1830s, and continued well into the 1860s. Matthiessen, reflecting his era’s interest in apolitical aestheticism and formalism, focused almost exclusively on five authors—Emerson, Thoreau, Hawthorne ...

  7. American Renaissance. The authors who began to come to prominence in the 1830s and were active until about the end of the Civil War—the humorists, the classic New Englanders, Herman Melville, Walt Whitman, and others—did their work in a new spirit, and their achievements were of a new sort.

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