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The Shame and the Sorrow

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The Dutch, through the directors of the West India Company, purchased Manhattan Island in 1625. They had come to the New World as traders, not expecting to assume responsibility as the sovereign po...
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  • 12 March 2013
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The Dutch, through the directors of the West India Company, purchased Manhattan Island in 1625. They had come to the New World as traders, not expecting to assume responsibility as the sovereign possessor of a conquered New Netherland. They did not intend to make war on the native peoples around Manhattan Island, but they did; they did not intend to help destroy native cultures, but they did; they intended to be overseas the tolerant, pluralistic, and antimilitaristic people they thought themselves to be—and in so many respects were—at home, but they were not.

For the Dutch intruders, establishing a settled presence away from the homeland meant the destabilization of the adventurers' values and self-regard. They found that the initially peaceful encounters with the indigenous people soon took on the alarming overtones of an insurgency as the influx of the Dutch led to a complete upheaval and eventual disintegration of the social and political worlds of the natives.

How are the Dutch to be judged? Donna Merwick, in The Shame and the Sorrow, asks this question. She points to a betrayal both of their own values and of the native peoples. She also directs us to the self-delusion of hegemonic control. Her work belongs alongside the best of today's postcolonial studies in the description of cross-cultural violence and subtle questioning of the nature of writing its history.

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Price: $34.95
Pages: 344
Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press, Inc.
Imprint: University of Pennsylvania Press
Series: Early American Studies
Publication Date: 12 March 2013
Trim Size: 9.25 X 6.12 in
ISBN: 9780812222722
Format: Paperback
BISACs: HISTORY / United States / Colonial Period (1600-1775), History of the Americas, HISTORY / Indigenous Peoples of the Americas
REVIEWS Icon
"Merwick is unafraid of 'weighing up' the evidence carefully to recapture the 'moral murkiness' that dominated seventeenth-century Netherlanders' efforts. . . . [A] beautifully constructed work."
Donna Merwick is Senior Fellow in the Department of History at the University of Melbourne, Long Term Visiting Fellow at Australian National University, and Adjunct Associate Professor in the Swinburne Institute for Social Research at the Swinburne University of Technology. She is the author of Stuyvesant Bound: An Essay on Loss Across Time, also available from University of Pennsylvania Press, and Death of a Notary: Conquest and Change in Colonial New York.

Soundings

PART I. ALONGSHORE
1. Alongshore: Stories to Tell of the Virginias
2. "The Island"

PART II. SHARED BEACHES
3. The Quarterdeck and Trading Station
4. Natives and Strangers

PART III. STAYING ALONGSHORE
5. Sovereign People
6. Masters of Their Lands
7. Inland Drownings

PART IV. OMENS OF A TRAGEDY COMING ON
8. Bells of War
9. "Only This and Nothing More"
10. The Connecticut Valley: The Strangers' Ways of Violence

PART V. DEADLY ENCOUNTER
11. The Indian War Seen
12. The Indian War Given Words
13. The War's Haunting

PART VI. CROSS-COLONIZATION
14. Watchful Waiting
15. Alongshore Compromised
16. Considerations on a Just War

PART VII. FINAL LOGGED ENTRIES
17. Cultural Entanglement
18. No Closure

Weighing Up

Notes
Bibliography
Index
Acknowledgments