Living In The American Wilderness

Words: 1415
Pages: 6

The American Wilderness was known as the land of the unknown for many Europeans who did not know anything about the new land. The new land was the polar opposite of Europe. The American Wilderness was going to become a new beginning for each individual who decided to start a new life there. St. Jean de Crèvecoeur persuades the reader to immigrate to the new land as it has equal opportunities for every man, while Sarah Kemble Knight shows the reader what living in the American Wilderness is actually like as a woman and traveler. St. Jean de Crèvecoeur explains the new land for everyone to learn about and writes to show the endless opportunities that it is offering is for the benefit of the population. The American Wilderness was going to be …show more content…
Everyone in the new land will see themselves as American, and also acknowledge everyone as the same. Crèvecoeur also describes the amount of dedication it takes to move to a land where no one “as yet travelled half the extent of this mighty continent” but he also promises that it will be worth it in the end. A person’s true homeland “is that [of] which gives him land, bread, protection, and consequence:” The write also asks the reader “what attachment can a poor European emigrant have for a country where he had nothing?” This rhetorical questions depicts …show more content…
In the beginning, it was completely different than what any of the new immigrants had seen. They were used to bustling cities and oppression from others in the higher classes when they were in their old homeland. But now, since the immigrants “arrived on a new continent; a modern society offers itself to his contemptation,” which they can build from scratch. This new continent can be altered to be what the immigrants want it to be, free of monarchs, oppression, and unequal treatment which they had faced in