Summary: | John Denniss Liberty Asserted is an early English effort to dramatize conquest and assimilation in divided North America. The play centers on an Iroquois abducted Huron mother and son whose affiliations with the French and the English represent the tenuous and inveterate alliances shaping King Williams War and the War of Spanish Succession. Richard Braverman argues that Dennis uses a Lockean state of nature to turn his Whig politics into national myth. Reading Liberty Asserted as a Roman drama, Julie Ellison locates a stock narrative in which a conflict between reproductive and homo-social relations parallels a generic, contested terrain.
This paper draws new attention to the importance of Denniss North American setting. I argue that the wildly popular publication of Baron de Lahontans New Voyages to North America and the French missionary accounts which precede it had a significant impact on Liberty Asserted. While the informed ethnographer speaking from New France and the distant multiplicity of voices performing these regions may appear irreconcilable, a cross reading of Lahontans and Denniss texts suggests that both genres were often explicitly political and both had a vested interest in the projection of verisimilitude. Their inter-textual relationship demonstrates a complicity between empiricism and allegory in colonial imaginings, where Native American representations serve to clarify contested forms of conquest and assimilation in North America.
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