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New World Known World Shaping Knowledge In Early Angloamerican Writing 1st Edition David Read

  • SKU: BELL-1874596
New World Known World Shaping Knowledge In Early Angloamerican Writing 1st Edition David Read
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New World Known World Shaping Knowledge In Early Angloamerican Writing 1st Edition David Read instant download after payment.

Publisher: University of Missouri
File Extension: PDF
File size: 2.22 MB
Pages: 192
Author: David Read
ISBN: 9780826216007, 9780826265029, 0826216005, 0826265022
Language: English
Year: 2005
Edition: 1

Product desciption

New World Known World Shaping Knowledge In Early Angloamerican Writing 1st Edition David Read by David Read 9780826216007, 9780826265029, 0826216005, 0826265022 instant download after payment.

  New World, Known World examines the works of four writers closely associated with the early period of English colonization, from 1624 to 1649: John Smith’s Generall Historie of Virginia, William Bradford’s Of Plymouth Plantation, Thomas Morton’s New English Canaan, and Roger Williams’s A Key into the Language of America (in conjunction with another of Williams’s major works, The Bloudy Tenent of Persecution). David Read addresses these texts as examples of what he refers to as “individual knowledge projects”— the writers’ attempts to shape raw information and experience into patterns and narratives that can be compared with and assessed against others from a given society’s fund of accepted knowledge.             Read argues that the body of Western knowledge in the period immediately before the development of well-defined scientific disciplines is primarily the work of individuals functioning in relative isolation, rather than institutions working in concert. The European colonization of other regions in the same period exposes in a way few historical situations do both the complexity and the uncertainty involved in the task of producing knowledge.                Read treats each work as the project of a specific mind, reflecting a high degree of intentionality and design, and not simply as a collection of documentary evidence to be culled in the service of a large-scale argument. He shows that each author adds a distinct voice to the experience of North American colonization and that each articulates it in ways that are open to analysis in terms of form, style, convention, rhetorical strategies, and applications of metaphor and allegory.             By applying the tools of literary interpretation to colonial texts, Read reaches a fuller understanding of the immediate consequences of English colonization in North America on the culture’s base of knowledge. Students and scholars of early modern colonialism and transatlantic studies, as well as those with interests in seventeenth-century American and English literature, should find this book of particular value.  

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