The Celestial Railroad

E225226

"The Celestial Railroad" is a satirical short story by Nathaniel Hawthorne that modernizes and critiques John Bunyan’s "The Pilgrim’s Progress" by depicting a convenient railroad route to the Celestial City.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
The Celestial Railroad canonical 2

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (47)

Predicate Object
instanceOf allegory
satirical work
short story
adaptationOf the pilgrimage journey in The Pilgrim’s Progress
approximatePublicationYear 1843
author Nathaniel Hawthorne
authorNationality American
basedOn The Pilgrim’s Progress
basedOnWorkAuthor John Bunyan
centralTheme commercialization of religion
conflict between convenience and true faith
critique of spiritual complacency
moral shortcuts in the Christian life
countryOfOrigin United States of America
surface form: United States
critiques The Pilgrim’s Progress
exploresConcept hypocrisy in religious practice
modernity and industrial progress
featuresCharacter Mr. Smooth-it-away
the narrator
featuresLocation Celestial City
Vanity Fair
firstPublishedIn The Democratic Review
hasMoralOrDidacticPurpose yes
includedInCollection Mosses from an Old Manse
influencedBy Christian allegory tradition
Puritan religious thought
intendedAudience adult readers
language English
literaryForm prose fiction
literaryGenre allegory
satire
literaryMovement American Romanticism
narrativeMode frame narrative
narrativePerspective first-person narrator
parodies The Pilgrim’s Progress
periodOfComposition 19th century
primaryConflict true spiritual pilgrimage versus easy mechanical transport
publicationTypeOfFirstAppearance periodical
setting a modernized version of the pilgrimage route to the Celestial City
symbolism The Allegory of the New Jerusalem
surface form: Celestial City as a symbol of salvation

Vanity Fair as a symbol of worldly temptation
railroad as a symbol of modern convenience
targetOfSatire moral compromise for comfort
superficial religiosity
tone didactic
ironic
workType religious satire

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (2)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Twice-Told Tales containsWork The Celestial Railroad
Mosses from an Old Manse hasPart The Celestial Railroad