Early Native Literacies in New England: A Documentary and Critical AnthologyKristina Bross, Hilary E. Wyss University of Massachusetts Press, 2008 - 276 pages Designed as a corrective to colonial literary histories that have excluded Native voices, this anthology brings together a variety of primary texts produced by the Algonquian peoples of New England during the seventeenth, eighteenth, and very early nineteenth centuries. Included among these written materials and objects are letters, signatures, journals, baskets, pictographs, confessions, wills, and petitions, each of which represents a form of authorship. Together they demonstrate the continuing use of traditional forms of memory and communication and the lively engagement of Native peoples with alphabetic literacy during the colonial period. Each primary text is accompanied by an essay that places it in context and explores its significance. Written by leading scholars in the field, these readings draw on recent trends in literary analysis, history, and anthropology to provide an excellent overview of the field of early Native studies. They are also intended to provoke discussion and open avenues for further exploration by students and other interested readers. Above all, the texts and commentaries gathered in this volume provide an opportunity to see Native American literature as a continuity of expression that reflects choices made long before contact and colonization, rather than as a nineteenth -- or even twentieth-century invention.Contributors include Heidi Bohaker, Heather Bouwman, Joanna Brooks, Kristina Bross, Stephanie Fitzgerald, Sandra Gustafson, Laura Arnold Leibman, Kevin McBride, David Murray, Laura Murray, Jean O'Brien, Ann Marie Plane, Philip Round, Jodi Schorb, David Silverman, and Hilary E. Wyss. |
From inside the book
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... Sarah Simon , was dominated by a matriarch.27 The letters between Wheelock and the widow Sarah Simon suggest that Sarah the daughter initially fulfilled a role as her mother's deputy.28 Her reports persuade her mother to send along the ...
... Sarah Simon a long , defensive letter in which he justifies his treatment of her children and then imperiously concludes , " Your Daughter Sarah carries herself very well , but I think it not best she should come home to visit you till ...
... Sarah Simon's economic prospects , we can only speculate on what religion held out for young Sarah , who by 1769 was so clearly ready to abandon Wheelock's rules . There is no record of what happened to Sarah Simon thereafter . In terms ...
Contents
The Mohegans | 15 |
Joseph Johnson Diary 1773 | 28 |
Laura J Murray Joseph Johnsons Diary Farmington | 42 |
Copyright | |
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Early Native Literacies in New England: A Documentary and Critical Anthology Kristina Bross,Hilary E. Wyss No preview available - 2008 |