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Rip Van Winkle And The Dangers Of American Innocence Essay

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“Rip Van Winkle” and the Dangers of American Innocence Washington Irving’s “Rip Van Winkle” is a staple of early American literature that has lived through the ages as a fable that as Americans we tell our children to entertain and illicit a message or moral that they will be able to take away from this slice of American literature. Irving’s story does in fact have a lot to say about America as a young and naive nation that has bred a national identity, but in the process has forgotten about the past and thrown away any sense of previous ideas of a national identity. Irving’s story is ultimately about the dangers of American innocence and progress as well as how this naive national sense of identity can help to create the good natured, but lazy Rip and the hostile townsfolk of Sleepy Hollow. Washington Irving’s story as a piece commenting on the formation of a national American identity is quite interesting in it’s views of America and what it stands for at the time after the Revolutionary War. The following paper will examine Irving’s short story and interpret it into terms of trying to understand Irving’s idea of what the American identity of the time is. To further examine the thesis the paper will look at the town as a representation of the danger of innocence towards the national identity. The second part will look at Rip Van Winkle himself as another piece towards the idea of innocence creating a danger for himself and the country as a whole. Finally the paper will

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