"Opening the scope to the wider world enables the author to
consider how settlers in very small comunities engaged with the
process of colonization."
--"Connecticut History"
"The author's estimation of the book's attainments is
persuasive."--"International Journal of Maritime History"
In seventeenth-century North America, communities on eastern
Long Island were an integral part of the tumultuous and dynamic New
England region and the larger Atlantic American world. They were
created and modified by ideas and traditions that were inherent to
life in Atlantic America and were not simply imported from Europe
or established solely by settlers and imposed on native
peoples.
In Crossing the Sound Faren R. Siminoff skillfully weaves new
data with sophisticated theoretical analysis to demonstrate that
the development of eastern Long Island was based more on complex
interactions between settlers and native peoples than on clashes
between the two groups. English and Dutch colonists did not merely
transport traditional systems of land ownership, political
organizations, and control of economic resources to the Northeast.
Rather, both settlers and natives underwent a process of
negotiation, resulting in a hybrid society that adapted and
reworked new and old patterns of life, highlighting the lasting
influence of native communities on the emerging American
identity.
This compelling case study adds new layers to the history of the
Atlantic world: it becomes a story without a dominant voice or
community at its core, demonstrating that neither monolithic groups
nor static interests prevailed in the region. Crossing the Sound
offers a fresh interpretation of colonial relationshipstracing
social, cultural, and political exchanges between groups.
General
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