5: age of reform - mexican-american war Flashcards
Transcendentalism
Developed from romanticism and had beliefs that changes in society were leading to a morally corrupt one, and the only way to escape (or to transcend/rise above) these evils was to connect with nature and one’s true self; prioritized intuition over logic (shift away from the Enlightenment) and saw spirituality in everyday life
Ralph Waldo Emerson
American speaker/writer who urged the American people to develop a self-reliant, distinctive culture rather than adopt that of Europe
Henry David Thoreau
American writer and philosopher (transcendentalist) who also believed in the policy of civil disobedience
Shakers
Society in New York that shared property and forbade men and women to marry/have sexual relations, leading to the community eventually dying out because not many new people were joining it
Oneida Community
Community founded in the 1850s in New England; practiced polygamy and shared essentially everything (including material possessions and partners); ended up becoming a capitalistic corporation
New Harmony
Founded by Robert Owen in Illinois with the premise of escaping the industrial society in the Northeast; ended up fading away due to lack of cooperation among its inhabitants
American literature
Edgar Allen Poe - The Raven
Herman Melville - Moby Dick
2nd Great Awakening
Rejected Enlightenment beliefs (deism / rationalism) and appealed to people emotionally / spiritually, encouraging active piety and especially appealing to the middle class by preaching that they could achieve salvation through hard work and faith
Hierarchy of White society in the South
1) Planters - owned plantations and many slaves, although may not have lived as lavishly as some believe
2) Plain folk - owned few to no slaves but aspired to become planters
3) Hill people / “hillbillies” - lived in the mountains or hills of the northern South and were typically poor; resented planters and the peculiar institution
4) Slaves
Led to little class conflict because many supported this hierarchy, but also because people opposed were too spread out to interact.
Texas independence/annexation
Mexico had declared independence from Spain many years before annexation, but their land (Texas) was sparsely populated, so they allowed American settlers to populate it (also to create a buffer zone between Texas and the Natives). Over time, the American population began to exceed the Mexican population, but Americans disliked the rules they instated (ie, mandatory conversion to Roman Catholicism) and declared Texas independent from Mexico.
Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo
Treaty that ended the Mexican-American War; established that the Southern border of Texas be the Rio Grande and gave New Mexico, California, and Texas to the United States for $15M
Wilmot Proviso
A proposition by Whigs in Congress that slavery should be outlawed in all states gained from the Mexican-American War (was not passed)
Cavalier image
- Included code of honor, which included chivalry (defending the honor of oneself/one’s wife as well)
- Included paternalism (used to justify slavery in many ways)
- Believed that the peculiar institution helped the South have a unique, distinctive culture
- Southern gentleman
General Colonization Law of 1824
Allowed foreigners (ie, Americans) to settle in Texas and own land (creates buffer between Mexico and Native Americans)
Brook farm
Northeast (secular / nonreligious) community where many transcendentalists went (ie, Emerson) and appealed to New England’s intellectual elite and their children