TY - BOOK AU - Olwell,Robert AU - Tully,Alan TI - Cultures and identities in colonial British America /edited by Robert Olwell and Alan Tully T2 - Anglo-America in the transatlantic world SN - 9781421419169 AV - E195 .C858 2006 PY - 2006/// CY - Baltimore PB - Johns Hopkins University Press KW - Electronic Books N1 - 2; The nature of slavery : environmental disorder and slave agency in colonial South Carolina; S. Max Edelson --; "For want of a social set" : networks and social interaction in the lower Cape Fear region of North Carolina, 1725-1775; Bradford J. Wood --; "Almost an Englishman" : eighteenth-century Anglo-African identities; Daniel C. Littlefield --; Conservation, class, and controversy in early America; Robert M. Weir --; Beyond declension : economic adaptation and the pursuit of export markets in the Massachusetts Bay region, 1630-1700; James E. McWilliams --; Paternalism and profits : planters and overseers in Piedmont Virginia, 1750-1825; James M. Baird --; "The fewnesse of handicraftsmen" : artisan adaptation and innovation in the colonial Chesapeake; Jean B. Russo --; The other "Susquahannah traders" : women and exchange on the Pennsylvania frontier; James H. Merrell --; A death in the morning : the murder of Daniel Parke; Natalie Zacek --; Enjoying and defending charter privileges : corporate status and political culture in eighteenth-century Rhode Island; Edward M. Cook, Jr. --; Native Americans, the plan of 1764, and a British empire that never was; Daniel K. Richter --; Between private and public spheres : liberty as cultural property in eighteenth-century British America; Michal Jan Rozbicki; 2; b N2 - "Never truly a "new world" entirely detached from the home countries of its immigrants, colonial America, over the generations, became a model of transatlantic culture. Colonial society was shaped by the conflict between colonists' need to adapt to the American environment and their desire to perpetuate old world traditions or to imitate the charismatic model of the British establishment. In the course of colonial history, these contrasting impulses produced a host of distinctive cultures and identities." "In this new collection, prominent scholars of early American history explore this complex dynamic of accommodation and replication to demonstrate how early American societies developed from the intersection of American and Atlantic influences. The volume offers fresh perspectives on colonial history and on early American attitudes toward slavery and ethnicity, native Americans, and the environment, as well as colonial social, economic, and political development. It reveals the myriad ways in which American colonists were the inhabitants and subjects of a wider Atlantic world."--Jacket UR - https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&db=nlabk&AN=1006841&site=eds-live&custid=s3260518 ER -