Colonial American History P (Wiley Blackwell Readers in American Social and Cultural History)

Colonial American History P (Wiley Blackwell Readers in American Social and Cultural History)

by Kirsten Fischer (Author)

Synopsis

This carefully collected volume of eight essays and 24 supporting documents allows access to the best and latest scholarship about mainland British North America. This book demonstrates how differences in race, ethnicity, gender, and social status were continually negotiated throughout Britain's North American colonies. It includes essays about Native Americans, the transatlantic slave trade, the rise of gentility, regulation of the sexual behavior of both white and black women, and the creation of new religious practices. Overall, Colonial American History reveals that this amalgamation of cultures presented the European colonists, Native Americans and Africans alike with the opportunity - and necessity - to establish new identities and create new forms of community and authority. The book includes a general introduction, chapter introductions, and supporting documents for each essay. The documents - diaries, letters, trial summaries, treaties, slave codes, and travel narratives - are designed to illuminate key issues raised in the essays and facilitate lively, informed classroom discussion.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 408
Edition: 1
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons
Published: 18 Jan 2002

ISBN 10: 0631218548
ISBN 13: 9780631218548

Media Reviews
Here we have eight eminently discussible articles, each one matched with three substantial, thoughtfully edited primary sources, and introductory notes that invite rather than inhibit analysis. Who could ask for more? A superb reader. Fred Anderson, University of Colorado at Boulder A deft, highly satisfying collection of original sources and trenchant scholarship that gets to the heart of colonial experience in early America. Jon Butler, Yale University
Author Bio
Kirsten Fischer teaches in the Department of History at the University of Minnesota. She is the author of Bodies of Evidence: Sex, Race, and Resistance in Early North Carolina(2001). Eric Hinderaker is associate Professor of History at the University of Utah. He is the author of Elusive Empires: Constructing Colonialism in the Ohio Valley (1997).