In this timely contribution to colonial studies, Gesa Mackenthun analyzes English and Spanish narratives of the "discovery" and colonization of America, from the Caribbean and Mexico north to Virginia and New England. She shows how Europeans wrote themselves into possession of America by translating their deep-seated colonial anxiety into the ideology of native savagery and rightful territorial ownership. The Europeans' metaphors of domination depended on silencing indigenous voices even as the writers pretended to record Native leaders. This series of theoretically informed readings includes Hernan Cortes and Motecuhzoma, Richard Hakluyt, Ralph Lane, Sir Walter Ralegh, John Smith and Powhatan, and the Puritans. Mackenthun's New Historicist and postcolonial scholarship reveals the verbal and physical translation of empire from New Spain to New England. Her concluding chapter uses gender theory to draw a brilliant connection between the the Puritans' expulsion of Anne Hutchinson and the genocide of the Pequots, whose relationship to the land was seen as dangerously feminine in contrast to the Puritan model of masculine mastery.
In response to these questions, I offer a reading from one of my Dartmouth students, Nichola Tucker, who was given the task of writing about “Orozco's mural and the epic form” in a senior seminar. Tucker argues that it is the viewer who ...
Surveying various works of travel literature, this text argues that travel writing redefines the myriad genres it often comprises.
texts contained firsthand accounts from the Americas that spoke to what Anthony Pagden calls “the autopic ... C. Brown and Arthur F. Marotti (Houndmills: Macmillan, 1997), 67–9; Quinn, Quinn, and Hillier, eds., New American World, vol.
To purchase your own copy of this or any of Taylor & Francis or Routledge's collection of thousands of eBooks please go ... Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data Theorizing sexual violence / edited by Renée J. Heberle and ...
The poet shows that the new black leadership is contradictory and not genuine in behaviour as they do not push to empower the majority of blacks. Instead, they push themselves into houses and offices formerly occupied by colonialists ...
Moffitt and Sebastian, O Brave New People, 243, Barton, Observations on some parts of Natural History, to which is prefixed an account of several remarkable vestiges of an ancient date, which have been discovered in different parts of ...
... Atanarjuat and Sauri's daughter Puja and son Oki grow up in this climate of rivalry and hatred. Amaqjuaq, the Strong One, and Atanarjuat, the Fast Runner, soon change the power- relations in the community by becoming the best hunters ...
This is the first major study to comprehensively analyse English encounters with the New World in the sixteenth century and their impact on early English understandings of America and changing approaches to exploration and settlement.
The collection begins by exploring the initial encounters between the Jamestown settlers and the Powhatan Indians and the relations of both these groups with London.
... globalectic literary imagination. In “Globalectic Imagination: The World in the Postcolonial,” an essay that further develops the concept, Ngʕƨɉ discusses globalectics as a concept that is partly theoretical, since it describes a way of ...