One Small Candle: The Plymouth Puritans and the Beginning of English New England
Autor Francis J. Bremeren Limba Engleză Hardback – 21 oct 2020
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780197510049
ISBN-10: 0197510043
Pagini: 272
Ilustrații: 13 halftones
Dimensiuni: 208 x 137 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.43 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0197510043
Pagini: 272
Ilustrații: 13 halftones
Dimensiuni: 208 x 137 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.43 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
Bremer's ability to penetrate the English and Dutch side of the Plymouth settlers' story and succinctly break down the painstaking minutia of religious conflicts and convictions at play must be appreciated for the difficult work it is.
Francis Bremer's One Small Candle, focusing on the crucial early history of the colony, offers what will remain for many years the definitive account of early Plymouth's religious history.
Frequently using the perspective of English puritan William Brewster, this history shows Bremer's mastery of puritan sources, history, and historiography, and also marks the 400th anniversary of the colonization at Plymouth. This book covers a fairly brief period of time and a small group of people, giving space for a close examination, focusing mainly on religious history but also including book history, Native history, and biographical details.
Bremer's One Small Candle, focusing on the crucial early history of the colony, offers what will remain for many years the definitive account of early Plymouth's religious history....Combing through all the existing evidence and setting it firmly within its contemporary context, Bremer makes a very compelling case that the Plymouth church system provided the model for that of Massachusetts.
Established scholars will also find it engaging. Summing Up: Recommended. Advanced undergraduates through faculty; professionals.
Bremer marries a relevant thesis to a nuanced treatment of the major characters and churches in the Plymouth story... Recommended. Advanced undergraduates through faculty; professionals.
Bremer's brief examination of the Puritans who settled the Plymouth Colony synthesizes a senior scholar's lifetime of research on Puritanism while offering his fresh reinterpretation of Plymouth's significance.... His book works best as an introduction to the Pilgrims for graduate seminars in Colonial history and American religion. Established scholars will also find it engaging.
Francis Bremer...has devoted most of his scholarly career to the study of 'New England Beginnings,' and is particularly situated to look at the big picture; this book is very much the product of that vision. While summaries of the work note that this is a study of the role of religion in the settlement of the Plymouth Colony, it is much more than that—much more....There is real value in the conciseness of Bremer's presentation and an elegance in its brevity....One Small Candle stands above the stormy sea of books about the Mayflower that have been produced leading up to the 400th anniversary, and illuminates not only the religious background of the Pilgrims, but the big picture of their lives, community, and culture.
This book shines a light on a period and a culture that contributed greatly to the formation of our best institutions, educational, political, and cultural. It is rare to see a historian treat the Puritans with real objectivity, allowing a generous acknowledgement of the contributions their democratic and reformist ethos made at a crucial time in our history.
Francis Bremer's One Small Candle is a remarkable achievement. Drawing on the latest scholarship about the Native peoples of New England and centering his narrative on the Plymouth puritans' religiosity, Bremer replaces Americans' myths about dark-garbed 'Pilgrims' and the purported 'First Thanksgiving' with a well-crafted, historically accurate account of Plymouth Colony that should attract many interested readers.
There is no one better than Francis Bremer, after a lifetime of research on early America, to introduce an old story in an absorbingly new way. One of the great founding narratives of American life is here seen through the eyes of a scholar who leads us on a clear and accessible path and reminds us that this is a tale of two cultures meeting as much as it is an epic of Pilgrim Parents.
Francis Bremer's definitive account of the high ideals of Plymouth Colony is a rich and moving narrative of the experiment in congregationalism that was the blueprint for a participatory democracy. In a masterly synthesis of existing scholarship, the eminent historian of New England cuts away myths about women's roles, relations with native Americans, and the links with other colonies.
One Small Candle is a seemingly straightforward description of the early history of Plymouth Colony...Bremer's narrative provides a subtle, engaging analysis that integrates Plymouth.
One Small Candle ...recenters the place of religion in the separatist puritans' story and explains how they lived in a world in which no boundary existed between the spiritual and the material...This book...should appeal to scholars studying both the religious and political history of early America. It also offers a refreshing interpretation of this period of history by showing it to be a story of the complicated coexistence of Europeans and Native Americans just as much as it is one of the puritans' struggles... One Small Candle is an accessible read that will pique, as well as hold, the interest of scholars and the general public alike.
Francis Bremer's One Small Candle, focusing on the crucial early history of the colony, offers what will remain for many years the definitive account of early Plymouth's religious history.
Frequently using the perspective of English puritan William Brewster, this history shows Bremer's mastery of puritan sources, history, and historiography, and also marks the 400th anniversary of the colonization at Plymouth. This book covers a fairly brief period of time and a small group of people, giving space for a close examination, focusing mainly on religious history but also including book history, Native history, and biographical details.
Bremer's One Small Candle, focusing on the crucial early history of the colony, offers what will remain for many years the definitive account of early Plymouth's religious history....Combing through all the existing evidence and setting it firmly within its contemporary context, Bremer makes a very compelling case that the Plymouth church system provided the model for that of Massachusetts.
Established scholars will also find it engaging. Summing Up: Recommended. Advanced undergraduates through faculty; professionals.
Bremer marries a relevant thesis to a nuanced treatment of the major characters and churches in the Plymouth story... Recommended. Advanced undergraduates through faculty; professionals.
Bremer's brief examination of the Puritans who settled the Plymouth Colony synthesizes a senior scholar's lifetime of research on Puritanism while offering his fresh reinterpretation of Plymouth's significance.... His book works best as an introduction to the Pilgrims for graduate seminars in Colonial history and American religion. Established scholars will also find it engaging.
Francis Bremer...has devoted most of his scholarly career to the study of 'New England Beginnings,' and is particularly situated to look at the big picture; this book is very much the product of that vision. While summaries of the work note that this is a study of the role of religion in the settlement of the Plymouth Colony, it is much more than that—much more....There is real value in the conciseness of Bremer's presentation and an elegance in its brevity....One Small Candle stands above the stormy sea of books about the Mayflower that have been produced leading up to the 400th anniversary, and illuminates not only the religious background of the Pilgrims, but the big picture of their lives, community, and culture.
This book shines a light on a period and a culture that contributed greatly to the formation of our best institutions, educational, political, and cultural. It is rare to see a historian treat the Puritans with real objectivity, allowing a generous acknowledgement of the contributions their democratic and reformist ethos made at a crucial time in our history.
Francis Bremer's One Small Candle is a remarkable achievement. Drawing on the latest scholarship about the Native peoples of New England and centering his narrative on the Plymouth puritans' religiosity, Bremer replaces Americans' myths about dark-garbed 'Pilgrims' and the purported 'First Thanksgiving' with a well-crafted, historically accurate account of Plymouth Colony that should attract many interested readers.
There is no one better than Francis Bremer, after a lifetime of research on early America, to introduce an old story in an absorbingly new way. One of the great founding narratives of American life is here seen through the eyes of a scholar who leads us on a clear and accessible path and reminds us that this is a tale of two cultures meeting as much as it is an epic of Pilgrim Parents.
Francis Bremer's definitive account of the high ideals of Plymouth Colony is a rich and moving narrative of the experiment in congregationalism that was the blueprint for a participatory democracy. In a masterly synthesis of existing scholarship, the eminent historian of New England cuts away myths about women's roles, relations with native Americans, and the links with other colonies.
One Small Candle is a seemingly straightforward description of the early history of Plymouth Colony...Bremer's narrative provides a subtle, engaging analysis that integrates Plymouth.
One Small Candle ...recenters the place of religion in the separatist puritans' story and explains how they lived in a world in which no boundary existed between the spiritual and the material...This book...should appeal to scholars studying both the religious and political history of early America. It also offers a refreshing interpretation of this period of history by showing it to be a story of the complicated coexistence of Europeans and Native Americans just as much as it is one of the puritans' struggles... One Small Candle is an accessible read that will pique, as well as hold, the interest of scholars and the general public alike.
Notă biografică
Francis J. Bremer is Professor Emeritus of History at Millersville University and the Coordinator of New England Beginnings, a partnership formed to commemorate the cultures that shaped New England four hundred years ago. An eminent scholar of Puritanism in the Atlantic world, he is the author of the prize-winning John Winthrop: America's Forgotten Founding Father (OUP, 2003); First Founders: American Puritans and Puritanism in the Atlantic World; and Building a New Jerusalem: John Davenport, a Puritan in Three Worlds, among other titles.