The Cambridge History of American Literature: Volume 1, 1590-1820Sacvan Bercovitch, Cyrus R. K. Patell Volume I of The Cambridge History of American Literature was originally published in 1997, and covers the colonial and early national periods and discusses the work of a diverse assemblage of authors, from Renaissance explorers and Puritan theocrats to Revolutionary pamphleteers and poets and novelists of the new republic. Addressing those characteristics that render the texts distinctively American while placing the literature in an international perspective, the contributors offer a compelling new evaluation of both the literary importance of early American history and the historical value of early American literature. |
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Page ix
... Society , I explored the relationship of manuscript communications and print ; the find- ings presented here should be regarded as an exercise in the new deonto- logical history of the book advocated by David D. Hall and Michael Warner ...
... Society , I explored the relationship of manuscript communications and print ; the find- ings presented here should be regarded as an exercise in the new deonto- logical history of the book advocated by David D. Hall and Michael Warner ...
Page x
... Society . Robert Bolling's " Occlusion , " Collection , Br [ ock ] 163 , appears courtesy of the Huntington Library . Elizabeth Graeme's " The foregoing song answered by a young Lady , " Juvinilia Poemata , Manuscript 13494Q , is ...
... Society . Robert Bolling's " Occlusion , " Collection , Br [ ock ] 163 , appears courtesy of the Huntington Library . Elizabeth Graeme's " The foregoing song answered by a young Lady , " Juvinilia Poemata , Manuscript 13494Q , is ...
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Contents
THE PAPERS OF EMPIRE | 13 |
THE NATURAL INHABITANTS | 37 |
THREE WRITERS OF EARLY AMERICA | 59 |
SETTLEMENTS | 84 |
THE DISPUTE OF THE NEW WORLD | 109 |
TRAVELING IN AMERICA | 126 |
THE FINAL VOYAGE | 149 |
NEW ENGLAND PURITAN LITERATURE | 169 |
RELIGIOUS VOICES | 390 |
WRITING THE REVOLUTION | 426 |
THE LITERATURE OF PUBLIC DOCUMENTS | 470 |
THE LIMITS OF ENLIGHTENMENT | 496 |
THE LITERATURE OF THE REVOLUTIONARY AND EARLY NATIONAL PERIODS | 539 |
LETTERS OF THE EARLY REPUBLIC | 541 |
MAGAZINES CRITICISM AND ESSAYS | 558 |
THE DRAMA | 573 |
THE LANGUAGE OF SALEM WITCHCRAFT | 171 |
THE DREAM OF A CHRISTIAN UTOPIA | 183 |
PERSONAL NARRATIVE AND HISTORY | 205 |
POETRY | 226 |
THE JEREMIAD | 255 |
REASON AND REVIVALISM | 279 |
BRITISHAMERICAN BELLES LETTRES | 307 |
THE AMERICAN ENLIGHTENMENT 17501820 | 345 |
FINDING THE REVOLUTION | 347 |
WHAT IS ENLIGHTENMENT? SOME AMERICAN ANSWERS | 368 |
Other editions - View all
The Cambridge History of American Literature:, Volume 1; Volumes 1590-1820 Sacvan Bercovitch No preview available - 1994 |
The Cambridge History of American Literature: Volume 1, 1590-1820 Sacvan Bercovitch No preview available - 1997 |
Common terms and phrases
Adams Ameri Anne Hutchinson appear Arawaks Arthur Mervyn authority Bartram become belles lettres Benjamin Boston Bradford British Brown century Charles Brockden Brown Charlotte Temple Christian church civilization claim clergy colonial Constitution Cooper Cotton Cotton Mather culture death Declaration discourse drama early republican Edwards eighteenth-century England English Enlightenment essay European expression Federalist female fiction Franklin genre God's human idea Increase Mather Indians Irving James Jefferson jeremiad John John Adams king land language later letters Lewis liberty literary literature Massachusetts Mather ment ministers moral Mourt's Relation narrative Native Americans nature novel original pamphlet Plymouth Plantation poems poet poetic poetry political preaching published Puritan readers reason religion religious republican Revolution revolutionary rhetoric Samuel sense sermon slave slavery Smith social society spirit Thomas thought tion truth verse Virginia virtue voice Washington wilderness William women words writing