Commerce and Settlement: Rethinking Early New England History
This paper addresses the long and structuring impact of the Puritan paradigm on early New England history and historiography. It highlights the tendency of the religious model to obscure or marginalize the entrepreneurial and commercial impulse inherent in the colonizing project of the Massachusetts...
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Société d'Etudes Anglo-Américaines des XVIIe et XVIIIe siècles
2020-12-01
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Series: | XVII-XVIII |
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Online Access: | http://journals.openedition.org/1718/5877 |
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doaj-54f5918adfed444e978b33ee1127f7622021-01-04T08:26:06ZengSociété d'Etudes Anglo-Américaines des XVIIe et XVIIIe sièclesXVII-XVIII0291-37982117-590X2020-12-017710.4000/1718.5877Commerce and Settlement: Rethinking Early New England HistoryAgnès DelahayeThis paper addresses the long and structuring impact of the Puritan paradigm on early New England history and historiography. It highlights the tendency of the religious model to obscure or marginalize the entrepreneurial and commercial impulse inherent in the colonizing project of the Massachusetts Bay Company. It argues that settlement, or the action of appropriating and transforming indigenous land for the benefit of the corporation, provides a salutary, contextual perspective on the role of commerce and expansion in shaping New England societies at their founding. The original documents and the promotion of the corporation show that John Winthrop and his colonial government embraced the economic implications of land appropriation and commercial development, managing labor and trade with a view toward colonial and financial success on an Atlantic scale. Their expansionist policies and their concern for the protection and preservation of the property and the privileges of the entire corporate body transformed the Company into a proto-state defined by and attached to its sovereignty.http://journals.openedition.org/1718/5877Settlementsettler colonialismcolonial governancecommercecolonizationNew England |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Agnès Delahaye |
spellingShingle |
Agnès Delahaye Commerce and Settlement: Rethinking Early New England History XVII-XVIII Settlement settler colonialism colonial governance commerce colonization New England |
author_facet |
Agnès Delahaye |
author_sort |
Agnès Delahaye |
title |
Commerce and Settlement: Rethinking Early New England History |
title_short |
Commerce and Settlement: Rethinking Early New England History |
title_full |
Commerce and Settlement: Rethinking Early New England History |
title_fullStr |
Commerce and Settlement: Rethinking Early New England History |
title_full_unstemmed |
Commerce and Settlement: Rethinking Early New England History |
title_sort |
commerce and settlement: rethinking early new england history |
publisher |
Société d'Etudes Anglo-Américaines des XVIIe et XVIIIe siècles |
series |
XVII-XVIII |
issn |
0291-3798 2117-590X |
publishDate |
2020-12-01 |
description |
This paper addresses the long and structuring impact of the Puritan paradigm on early New England history and historiography. It highlights the tendency of the religious model to obscure or marginalize the entrepreneurial and commercial impulse inherent in the colonizing project of the Massachusetts Bay Company. It argues that settlement, or the action of appropriating and transforming indigenous land for the benefit of the corporation, provides a salutary, contextual perspective on the role of commerce and expansion in shaping New England societies at their founding. The original documents and the promotion of the corporation show that John Winthrop and his colonial government embraced the economic implications of land appropriation and commercial development, managing labor and trade with a view toward colonial and financial success on an Atlantic scale. Their expansionist policies and their concern for the protection and preservation of the property and the privileges of the entire corporate body transformed the Company into a proto-state defined by and attached to its sovereignty. |
topic |
Settlement settler colonialism colonial governance commerce colonization New England |
url |
http://journals.openedition.org/1718/5877 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT agnesdelahaye commerceandsettlementrethinkingearlynewenglandhistory |
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1724349543072399360 |