Saints and Strangers: New England in British North America

Saints and Strangers: New England in British North America

by Joseph A. Conforti
Saints and Strangers: New England in British North America

Saints and Strangers: New England in British North America

by Joseph A. Conforti

eBook

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Overview

“Conforti’s book will give you better understanding of Colonial New England and the lives of your ancestors who settled there.” —Family Tree Magazine

Named a Choice Outstanding Academic Title

In the first general history of colonial New England to be published in over twenty-five years, Joseph A. Conforti synthesizes current and classic scholarship to explore how Puritan saints and “strangers” to Puritanism participated in the making of colonial New England.

Massachusetts Governor John Winthrop’s famous description of New England as a “city upon a hill” has tended to reduce the region’s history to an exclusively Pilgrim-Puritan drama, a world of narrow-minded founders, the First Thanksgiving, steepled churches, and the Salem witchcraft trials.

In a concise volume aimed at general readers and college students as well as historians, Conforti shows that New England was neither as Puritan nor as insular as most familiar stories imply. As the region evolved into British America’s preeminent maritime region, the Atlantic Ocean served as a highway of commercial and cultural encounter, connecting white English settlers to different races and religious communities of the transatlantic world.

The Puritan elect—but also Natives, African slaves, and non-Puritan white settlers—became active participants in the creation of colonial New England. Conforti discusses how these subcommunities of white, red, and black strangers to Protestant piety retained their own cultures, coexisted, and even thrived within and beyond the domains of Puritan settlement, creating tensions and pressure points in the later development of early America.

“The most innovative characteristic of Saints and Strangers is surely its integration of so many different people into a chronological narrative.” —International Journal of Maritime History

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780801889158
Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
Publication date: 04/27/2021
Series: Regional Perspectives on Early America
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 281
File size: 4 MB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Joseph A. Conforti is a professor of American and New England studies at the University of Southern Maine.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Prologue: City upon a Hill
1. Native New England: From Precontact to Colonial Beginnings
2. Puritan New England, 1620–1660
3. Beyond Puritan New England: Profane, Maritime, and Dissenting Borderlands
4. New England Besieged, 1660–1700
5. Saints and Strangers in the Eighteenth Century
6. Provincial New England: The Eighteenth-Century Empire of Liberty, Commerce, and Protestantism
Epilogue: From the City upon a Hill to Plymouth Rock
Notes
Essay on Sources
Index

What People are Saying About This

Richard Brown

This insightful, finely nuanced interpretation provides readers with a fresh, up-to-date narrative of New England history.

Richard Brown, University of Connecticut Humanities Institute

From the Publisher

This insightful, finely nuanced interpretation provides readers with a fresh, up-to-date narrative of New England history.
—Richard Brown, University of Connecticut Humanities Institute

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