preview

Irving Washington 's Rip Van Winkle

Decent Essays

Irving Washington’s Rip Van Winkle is one of the most famous and acclaimed works as well as one of Irving’s biggest successes. Irving wrote it after the American Revolution and during that time is when America’s society was still developing and becoming it’s a government of its own. This short story shows how a new, thriving America had gained freedom, but then that freedom came with a price as it meant that the newly freed country would eventually have had to struggle to establish its own identity. In the story, Irving actually represented these feelings of uncertainly through the titular Rip Van Winkle.
The story takes place in a setting in a colonial America and when it was still being ruled by Britain; Rip Van Winkle, while he was a good man he had his own boredom and problems that he did not deal with, including a nagging wife. This all changed when he fell asleep for 20 years and awoke to the same surroundings only everything about it had changed, from his home to the buildings, to the people and to the whole culture he once knew. Everything around him is new, nothing he knew before was there and he was almost like a fish out of water; his “village was altered” as the people were now different and with different mannerisms and the America he once knew had been freed from Britain (Irving, pg. 36). Even the entire disposition of the village was different since it no longer had “the accustomed phlegm and drowsy tranquility” and was much busier and lively (Irving, pg.

Get Access