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Unmoored

The Search for Sincerity in Colonial America

Ana Schwartz

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Omohundro Institute and University of North Carolina Press img Link Publisher

Geisteswissenschaften, Kunst, Musik / Geschichte

Beschreibung

New England's Puritans were devoted to self-scrutiny. Consumed by the pursuit of pure hearts, they latched on to sincerity as both an ideal and a social process. It fueled examinations of inner lives, governed behavior, and provided a standard against which both could be judged. In a remote, politically volatile frontier, settlers gambled that sincerity would reinforce social cohesion and shore up communal happiness. Sincere feelings and the discursive practices that manifested them promised a safe haven in a world of grinding uncertainty.

But as Ana Schwartz demonstrates, if sincerity promised much, it often delivered more: it bred shame and resentment among the English settlers and, all too often, extraordinary violence toward their Algonquian neighbors and the captured Africans who lived among them. Populating her "city on a hill" with the stock characters of Puritan studies as well as obscure actors, Schwartz breathes new life into our understanding of colonial New England.

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Schlagwörter

Paranoia, History of Psychoanalysis, Shame, Early modern imperialism, Affect, Early modern colonization, Biopolitics, Anglo-American settlement, Contact zone, Puritan America, Anglo-Algonquian Contact, History of biopower, History of Knowledge, History of emotions, Denial, Early Atlantic world, Middle ground, Resentment, Repression, Colonial New England, Friendship, Settler colonialism, Disappointment, Unhappiness