Between Two Worlds is a story teeming with people on the move, making
decisions, indulging or resisting their desires and dreams. In the
seventeenth century a quarter of a million men, women, and children
left England's shores for America. Some were explorers and merchants,
others soldiers and missionaries; many were fugitives from poverty and
persecution. All, in their own way, were adventurers, risking their
lives and fortunes to make something of themselves overseas. They
irrevocably changed the land and indigenous peoples they encountered -
and their new world changed them. But that was only half the story.
The plantations established from Maine to the Caribbean needed support
at home, especially royal endorsement and money, which made
adventurers of English monarchs and investors too. Attitudes to
America were crucial, and evolved as the colonies grew in size,
prosperity, and self-confidence. Meanwhile, for those who had crossed
the ocean, America forced people to rethink the country in which they
had been raised, and to which they remained attached after emigration.
In tandem with new ideas about the New World, migrants pondered their
English mother country's traditions and achievements, its problems and
its uncertain future in an age of war and revolution. Using hundreds
of letters, journals, reports, pamphlets and contemporary books,
Between Two Worlds recreates this fascinating transatlantic history -
one which has often been neglected or misunderstood on both sides of
the Atlantic in the centuries since.
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How the English Became Americans
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780191653834
Publisert
2020
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Oxford University Press Academic UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter