By Nature and by Custom Cursed
Transatlantic Civil Discourse and New England Cultural Production, 1620–1660
Phillip H. Round

Civil Society: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives
Tufts University Press
University Press of New England

1999 • 335 pp. 6 x 9"
New England / American Studies / History - Colonial / Cultural Studies






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"Philip Round joins the growing number of literary scholars who, following the lead of historians, have shifted their focus away from local tradition to the transatlantic arena . . . With By Nature and By Custom Cursed, the paradigm shift in colonial literary studies takes a significant advance, and anyone who wants to arrive at a fully transatlantic understanding of colonial culture will need to reckon with Round's book." —William and Mary Quarterly

A major reexamination of New England's cultural society, in which Puritans share the stage with many other discourses.

In a major interdisciplinary reinterpretation of first-generation New England cultural formation, Phillip H. Round demonstrates that Puritanism was only one ingredient in the creation of a new American civil society. Examining five discourses at work in the early modern era -- civic order, truth-telling, gender difference, authorship, and ethnicity -- he provides fresh readings of early American writers like William Bradford and Anne Bradstreet, and historical figures like Anne Hutchinson and Thomas Morton, that reveal the true transatlantic and civil dimensions of our nation's earliest literature.

Though the struggle over social authority took place within a Reformed Protestant context, it was actually far more eclectic, heterogeneous, and secular than contemporary published Puritan discourses -- and their latter day interpreters -- would admit. Round steps outside the official Puritan discourse to emphasize several other modes of rhetorical expression: transatlantic letters, urban revolutionary discourses and performances, town records, and pamphlets and tracts that engaged questions of racial and gender difference. The result is a version of the "New England Mind" and public culture which is far more complicated and interesting than prevailing theories suggest.

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PHILLIP H. ROUND is Assistant Professor of English at the University of Iowa.








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