Catalogue of Books in the Library of the American Antiquarian Society

Catalogue of Books in the Library of the American Antiquarian Society

Author: American Antiquarian Society. Library

Publisher:

Published: 1837

Total Pages: 580

ISBN-13:

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Collection includes about 8,000 vols. donated by Isaiah Thomas, founder of the Society. The catalogue is "almost wholly the work of the late lamented librarian, Christopher C. Baldwin ... completed and brought up to the present date by ... Maturin L. Fisher."


The Atlantic Enlightenment

The Atlantic Enlightenment

Author: Susan Manning

Publisher: Ashgate Publishing, Ltd.

Published: 2008

Total Pages: 236

ISBN-13: 9780754660408

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Was there an Atlantic Enlightenment? This collection takes up the question, bringing together leading international scholars who cross disciplinary boundaries to offer new insights into the historical, literary, and material conditions that generated a major transatlantic genre of writing. The essays address questions of race, political economy, and the transmission of Enlightenment ideas in literary, political, and religious contexts on both sides of the Atlantic during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.


Nursing Fathers

Nursing Fathers

Author: Benjamin Lewis Price

Publisher: Lexington Books

Published: 1999

Total Pages: 264

ISBN-13: 9780739100516

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The rhetoric of Revolutionary America successfully cast King George III as an oppressive tyrant who crushed his North American colonists through excessive fiscal demands and political constraints. Yet for nearly a century prior to the Revolution, the English king had occupied a vital and overwhelmingly positive role in the political imagination of his colonial subjects. In this insightful new book on the subject, Benjamin Price argues that for most of the eighteenth century North American colonists viewed themselves as Englishmen, loyal to the monarchy and to the English constitution as recast by the Glorious Revolution of 1688. Price astutely analyzes the political ideology of kingship in colonial America, concluding that it was only on the very eve of the Revolution that most colonists rejected the vision of the king as a 'nursing father, ' that is, as a 'benevolent and just' protector of their lives, property, civil rights, and religious freedom. This fresh and exciting book should find a wide readership among historians of colonial America, early modern England, and Anglo-American political theory