The Jamestown Project

The Jamestown Project

by KarenOrdahlKupperman (Author)

Synopsis

Captain John Smith's 1607 voyage to Jamestown was not his first trip abroad. He had travelled throughout Europe, been sold as a war captive in Turkey, escaped, and returned to England in time to join the Virginia Company's colonizing project. In Jamestown, migrants, merchants, and soldiers who had also sailed to the distant shores of the Ottoman Empire, Africa and Ireland in search of new beginnings encountered Indians who already possessed broad understanding of Europeans. Experience of foreign environments and cultures had sharpened survival instincts on all sides and aroused challenging questions about human nature and its potential for transformation. It is against this enlarged temporal and geographic background that Jamestown dramatically emerges in Karen Kupperman's breathtaking study. Reconfiguring the national myth of Jamestown's failure, she shows how the settlement's distinctly messy first decade actually represents a period of ferment in which individuals were learning how to make a colony work. Despite the settlers' dependence on the Chesapeake Algonquians and strained relations with their London backers, they forged a tenacious colony that survived where others had failed. Indeed, the structures and practices that evolved through trial and error in Virginia would become the model for all successful English colonies, including Plymouth. Capturing England's intoxication with a wider world through ballads, plays, and paintings, and the stark reality of Jamestown - for Indians and Europeans alike - through the words of its inhabitants as well as archaeological and environmental evidence, Kupperman re-creates these formative years with astonishing detail.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 392
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Published: 13 Mar 2007

ISBN 10: 9780674024
ISBN 13: 9780674024748

Media Reviews
Offers an impressive synthesis of almost thirty years of scholarship on Atlantic colonization. Kupperman gracefully describes the colonial project from multiple perspectives, both Native and European.--Frances Flannery Journal of the American Oriental Society
Author Bio
Karen Ordahl Kupperman is Silver Professor of History at New York University.