The Puritan ordeal /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Delbanco, Andrew, 1952-
Imprint:Cambridge, Mass. : Harvard University Press, 1989.
Description:ix, 306 p. ; 25 cm.
Language:English
Subject:
Format: Print Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/964708
Hidden Bibliographic Details
ISBN:0674740556 (alk. paper)
Notes:Includes index.
Bibliography: p. [257]-296.
Review by Choice Review

An intricate and fascinating attempt to add an entirely new dimension to the practice of intellectual history. Its central feature is best expressed in the words of the author: "My hope is to help advance our understanding not of ideas so much as of feeling--specifically of the affective life of. . .New England more than three hundred and fifty years ago." How successful Delbanco is in achieving this most important of the many tasks he undertakes will be decided over succeeding years as historians accept or challenge his premises. The book is a work of exacting scholarship, the product of an original and exceedingly facile intelligence. Its workings and its many aims are too complex and multifaceted to be cataloged in an abbreviated review. If Delbanco carries scholarly opinion with him, however, his approach to research on American history will supersede the methodologies of Perry Miller, Alan Heimert, and the many others who followed in their paths. Graduate readership. -B. R. Burg, Arizona State University

Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A reevaluation of the Puritans and a fresh look at the process of becoming American in the 17th century. Delbanco (English/Columbia) attempts here to glimpse the feelings behind the oratory and written documentation of the Puritan existence. He is, he writes, ""unabashedly devoted to. . .the possibility of fervor rather than embarrassment"" about the Puritans--a group whose bad press of late has included the president of the Modern Language Association calling them the people ""who massacred the Indians and established the self-righteous religion and politics that determined American ideology."" Primary to understanding what made the Puritans into Americans, Delbanco asserts, is the realization that they were infused by the idea of being ""immigrants."" The author criticizes historians who have perpetuated the myth of the Puritans as somehow intuitively convinced of their place in ""the general assembly of the first-born."" Thus, Delbanco finds many analogies between the Puritan experience and that of the later wave of immigrants from eastern and southern Europe. ""The word 'brethren,' ""he writes, ""became, for both the Puritans and their enemies, the seventeenth-century equivalent of 'comrades.' "" In the end, Delbano returns to refuting the notion of the Puritans' ""chosenness""--finding that the distinctly American note in their experience is one of collective loneliness, a factor that the author feels holds clues not only to Puritanism but to American culture as a whole. Dense going at times, but a noteworthy historical analysis. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Review by Choice Review


Review by Kirkus Book Review