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Bodies Politic

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In this sweeping analysis of colonialism and its legacies, John Wood Sweet explores how the ongoing interaction of conquered Indians, English settlers, and enslaved Africans in New England produced...
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  • 01 February 2007
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In this sweeping analysis of colonialism and its legacies, John Wood Sweet explores how the ongoing interaction of conquered Indians, English settlers, and enslaved Africans in New England produced a closely interwoven, though radically divided, society. The coming together of these diverse peoples profoundly shaped the character of colonial New England, the meanings of the Revolution in the North, and the making of American democracy writ large.

Critically engaged with current debates about the dynamics of culture, racial identity, and postcolonial politics, this innovative and intellectually capacious work is grounded in a remarkable array of evidence. What emerges from this analysis of colonial and early national censuses, newspapers, diaries, letters, court records, printed works, and visual images are the dramatic confrontations and subtle negotiations by which Indians, Africans, and Anglo-Americans defined their respective places in early New England. Citizenship, as Sweet reveals, was defined in meeting houses as well as in courthouses, in bedrooms as well as on battlefields, in land disputes as well as on streets. Bodies Politic reveals how the legacy of colonialism shaped the emergence of the nineteenth-century North and continues, even to this day, to shape all our lives.

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Price: $39.95
Pages: 504
Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press, Inc.
Imprint: University of Pennsylvania Press
Publication Date: 01 February 2007
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780812219784
Format: Paperback
BISACs: HISTORY / United States / Revolutionary Period (1775-1800), History of the Americas
REVIEWS Icon
"An ambitious and persuasive account of the ways the political inclusion of some groups and not others connected the colonial era through the Revolution to the early American republic."
John Wood Sweet is Associate Professor of History at the University of North Carolina and coeditor (with Robert Appelbaum) of Envisioning an English Empire: Jamestown and the Making of the North Atlantic World, also available from the University of Pennsylvania Press.

List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction: After Origins

PT. I. COMING TOGETHER
1. Common Ground
2. Negotiating Slavery
3. Strange Christians

PT. II. LIVING TOGETHER
4. Strange Flesh
5. Men of Arms
6. Negotiating Freedom

PT. III. MOVING APART
7. Conceiving Race
8. Manifest Destinies
9. Hard Scrabble

Epilogue: Democracy in America
Notes
A Note on Sources
Index