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Subject Matter: Technology, The Body, And Science On The Anglo-American Frontier, 1500-1676
Joyce E. Chaplin

Subject Matter: Technology, The Body, And Science On The Anglo-American Frontier, 1500-1676

Harvard University Press (Feb 28, 2003)
9780674011229
| Paperback
428 pages | 150 x 226 mm | English
Dewey 970

Genre

  • Amer Hist Colonial

Subject

  • Frontier And Pioneer Life
  • History / Americas
  • Indians Of North America
  • Science And Civilization
  • United States

Plot

With this sweeping reinterpretation of early cultural encounters between the English and American natives, Joyce E. Chaplin thoroughly alters our historical view of the origins of English presumptions of racial superiority, and of the role science and technology played in shaping these notions. By placing the history of science and medicine at the very center of the story of early English colonization, Chaplin shows how contemporary European theories of nature and science dramatically influenced relations between the English and Indians within the formation of the British Empire.In Chaplin's account of the earliest contacts, we find the English--impressed by the Indians' way with food, tools, and iron--inclined to consider Indians as partners in the conquest and control of nature. Only when it came to the Indians' bodies, so susceptible to disease, were the English confident in their superiority. Chaplin traces the way in which this tentative notion of racial inferiority hardened and expanded to include the Indians' once admirable mental and technical capacities. Here we see how the English, beginning from a sense of bodily superiority, moved little by little toward the idea of their mastery over nature, America, and the Indians--and how this progression is inextricably linked to the impetus and rationale for empire.

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Added Date Jul 06, 2019 20:46:44
Modified Date Jul 06, 2019 20:46:45