New England's Crisis
Author : Benjamin Tompson
Publisher :
Page : 90 pages
File Size : 11,34 MB
Release : 1894
Category : American poetry
ISBN :
Author : Benjamin Tompson
Publisher :
Page : 90 pages
File Size : 11,34 MB
Release : 1894
Category : American poetry
ISBN :
Author : John McWilliams
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : 380 pages
File Size : 34,30 MB
Release : 2004-07-22
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 1139453734
In this magisterial study, John McWilliams traces the development of New England's influential cultural identity. Through written responses to historical crises from early New England through the pre-Civil War period, McWilliams argues that the meaning of 'New England' despite claims for its consistency was continuously reformulated. The significance of past crises was forever being reinterpreted for the purpose of meeting succeeding crises. The crises he examines include starvation, the Indian wars, the Salem witch trials, the revolution of 1775–76 and slavery. Integrating history, literature, politics and religion this is one of the most comprehensive studies of the meaning of 'New England' to appear in print. McWilliams considers a range of writing including George Bancroft's History of the United States, the political essays of Samuel Adams, the fiction of Nathaniel Hawthorne and the poetry of Robert Lowell. This compelling book is essential reading for historians and literary critics of New England.
Author : Club of Odd Volumes
Publisher :
Page : 82 pages
File Size : 22,38 MB
Release : 1894
Category : American poetry
ISBN :
Author : Samuel Abbott Green
Publisher :
Page : 116 pages
File Size : 33,89 MB
Release : 1902
Category : Boston (Mass.)
ISBN :
Author : James Egan
Publisher : Princeton University Press
Page : 193 pages
File Size : 12,75 MB
Release : 1999-04-05
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 1400823021
The emphasis on practical experience over ideology is viewed by many historians as a profoundly American characteristic, one that provides a model for exploring the colonial challenge to European belief systems and the creation of a unique culture. Here Jim Egan offers an unprecedented look at how early modern American writers helped make this notion of experience so powerful that we now take it as a given rather than as the product of hard-fought rhetorical battles waged over ways of imagining one's relationship to a larger social community. In order to show how our modern notion of experience emerges from a historical change that experience itself could not have brought about, he turns to works by seventeenth-century writers in New England and reveals the ways in which they authorized experience, ultimately producing a rhetoric distinctive to the colonies and supportive of colonialism. Writers such as John Smith, William Wood, John Winthrop, Anne Bradstreet, Benjamin Tompson, and William Hubbard were sensitive to the challenge experiential authority posed to established social hierarchies. Egan argues that they used experience to authorize a supplementary status system that would at once enhance England's economic, political, and spiritual status and provide a new basis for regulating English and native populations. These writers were assuaging fears over how exposure to alien environments threatened actual English bodies and also the imaginary body that authorized English monarchy and allowed English subjects to think of themselves as a nation. By reimagining the English nation, these supporters of English colonialism helped create a modern way of imagining national identity and individual subject formation.
Author : Samuel Abbott Green
Publisher :
Page : 36 pages
File Size : 45,43 MB
Release : 1676
Category : New-England's tears for her present miseries
ISBN :
Author : Gina M. Martino
Publisher : UNC Press Books
Page : 233 pages
File Size : 41,98 MB
Release : 2018-03-23
Category : History
ISBN : 1469641003
Across the borderlands of the early American northeast, New England, New France, and Native nations deployed women with surprising frequency to the front lines of wars that determined control of North America. Far from serving as passive helpmates in a private, domestic sphere, women assumed wartime roles as essential public actors, wielding muskets, hatchets, and makeshift weapons while fighting for their families, communities, and nations. Revealing the fundamental importance of martial womanhood in this era, Gina M. Martino places borderlands women in a broad context of empire, cultural exchange, violence, and nation building, demonstrating how women's war making was embedded in national and imperial strategies of expansion and resistance. As Martino shows, women's participation in warfare was not considered transgressive; rather it was integral to traditional gender ideologies of the period, supporting rather than subverting established systems of gender difference. In returning these forgotten women to the history of the northeastern borderlands, this study challenges scholars to reconsider the flexibility of gender roles and reveals how women's participation in transatlantic systems of warfare shaped institutions, polities, and ideologies in the early modern period and the centuries that followed.
Author : United States. Congress. Senate. Commerce
Publisher :
Page : 404 pages
File Size : 38,9 MB
Release : 1965
Category :
ISBN :
Author : Roger Eliot Stoddard
Publisher : Penn State Press
Page : 833 pages
File Size : 28,93 MB
Release : 2012
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 027105221X
"A bibliography of poetry composed in what is now the United States of America and printed in the form of books or pamphlets before 1821"--Provided by publisher.
Author :
Publisher :
Page : 744 pages
File Size : 19,16 MB
Release : 1974
Category : Energy policy
ISBN :