Colonial Writing and the New World, 1583-1671: Allegories of DesireColonial Writing in the New World 1583 1671 offers an account of the simultaneous emergence of colonialism and nationalism during the early modern period. It looks at the role that English interactions with native populations played in attempts to articulate a coherent English identity. Unlike most other studies of the subject, it suggests that colonialism is best understood as a phenomenon which had profound significance for people on both sides of the Atlantic. |
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Colonial Writing and the New World, 1583-1671: Allegories of Desire Thomas J. Scanlan No preview available - 2006 |
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Algonquin language allegory ambivalence America argues argument articulate assertion attempt bollies Brehon Law Brevíssima relación briefe and true Casas Catholic chapter Christian colonial adventure colonial desire colonial discourse colonial efforts colonial endeavor colonial enterprise colonial period colonial project colonial undertaking colonial writing colonists construct context conversion Crashaw cruelty culture DeBry DeBry's engravings describes England England's colonial English colonial English national identity English settlers Eudoxius European Faerie Queene fear and love function Gray Hakluyt Half-Way Covenant Harriot ibid images imagine implicit implicitly Indian Dialogues Ireland Irenius Irenius's Irish Jean de Léry John Eliot language Léry Léry's London Massachusetts Massachusetts Bay Colony means Miller missionary narrative native inhabitants native populations offer onial Perry Miller political praying Indians Protestant colonial Protestant nation Protestantism Puritans religious Roger Williams seems sense sermons Spanish Spenser suggests Symonds Thomas Harriot true report Tupinamba University Press Virginia colony Voyage Williams's words World