Puritan Conquistadors: Iberianizing the Atlantic, 1550-1700This book argues that the striking resemblances in Spanish and Puritan discourses of colonization as "exorcism" and as spiritual gardening point to a common Atlantic history. These resemblances suggest that we are better off if we simply consider the Puritan colonization of New England as a continuation of Iberian models rather than a radically different colonizing experience. The book demonstrates that a wider Pan-American perspective can upset the most cherished national narratives of the United States, for it maintains that the Puritan colonization of New England was as much a chivalric, crusading act of Reconquista (against the Devil) as was the Spanish conquest. |
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LibraryThing Review
User Review - Scapegoats - LibraryThingThis is an excellent 15 page article. Unfortunately it is a 200 page book. It makes the point that both Puritans and Conquistadors used the same sort of crusading rhetoric, portraying the Americas as ... Read full review
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What a joke! This argument is preposterous. If he actually used an evidence-based approach, he would never arrive at such a bizarre, counterfactual conclusion.
Contents
IV | 1 |
V | 35 |
VI | 39 |
VII | 50 |
VIII | 54 |
IX | 68 |
X | 71 |
XI | 76 |
XXIX | 136 |
XXX | 141 |
XXXI | 152 |
XXXII | 155 |
XXXIII | 176 |
XXXIV | 178 |
XXXV | 179 |
XXXVI | 186 |
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Common terms and phrases
According America Amerindians animals appears argued arrival Atlantic Aztecs battle become bodies British Catholic caused century chapter Christ Christian Church clear colonial common conquest conquistadors continued Cotton Cross crusading demonology demons describes devil discourse dragon early modern elect Elizabethan empire enemies England English Europeans example fact Finally flowers Franciscan garden hand hell heroes historians historiography holy human Iberian Ibid ideas Indians Indies interpretation Israelites John Juan keep King knight land Latin America liberation live Lord Mexico narrative natives Nature needed Nieremberg original paradise Peru plants poem present Protestant Puritans reading references represented saints San Marino satanic epic seek Smith sought soul Spain Spaniards Spanish spiritual struggle thought tion took tradition tree turn University views Virginia wilderness World