American Colonial Prose

American Colonial Prose

Author: Mary Ann Radzinowicz

Publisher: CUP Archive

Published: 1984-06-07

Total Pages: 300

ISBN-13: 9780521286800

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Comprises texts from the American colonial period, which bear witness to the extraordinary diversity of writing at this time.


Colonial America: Essays in Politics and Social Development

Colonial America: Essays in Politics and Social Development

Author: Douglas Greenberg

Publisher: McGraw-Hill Humanities/Social Sciences/Languages

Published: 2001

Total Pages: 792

ISBN-13:

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As an anthology of readings by top scholars in the field of Early American History, Colonial America: Essays in Politics and Social Development provides students with an insightful and critical view of the Colonial period. The Fifth Edition is heavily revised to reflect shifting emphasis on the continentalist approach to early American history. With seventeen new essays, including essays on the New France and Spanish borderlands, this reader continues to be a best-selling text in the Colonial America course.


The Dividing Line Histories of William Byrd II of Westover

The Dividing Line Histories of William Byrd II of Westover

Author: William Byrd

Publisher:

Published: 2013

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13:

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"After his 1728 Virginia-North Carolina boundary expedition, Virginia planter and politician William Byrd II composed two very different accounts of his adventures. The Secret History of the Line was written for private circulation, offering tales of scandalous behavior and political misconduct, peppered with rakish humor and personal satire. The History of the Dividing Line, continually revised by Byrd for decades after the expedition, was intended for the London literary market, though not published in his lifetime. Collating all extant manuscripts, Kevin Joel Berland's landmark scholarly edition of these two histories provides wide-ranging historical and cultural contexts for both, helping to recreate the social and intellectual ethos of Byrd and his time. Byrd enriched his narratives with material appropriated from earlier authors, many of whose works were in his library--the most extensive in the American colonies. Berland identifies for the first time many of Byrd's sources and raises the question: how reliable are histories that build silently upon antecedent texts and present borrowed material as firsthand testimony? In his analysis, Berland demonstrates the need for a new category to assess early modern history writing: the hybrid, accretional narrative"--