Early Modern Transatlantic Encounters and the Formation of English National Identity
Elizabeth Sauer(Author)
Cambridge University Press
Will be published approx. on 30. September 2026
Book
Paperback/Softback
300 pages
978-1-009-77811-4 (ISBN)
Description
In the crucible of New World encounters - discursive, ideological, and experiential - there developed multiple forms of English nationhood. Elizabeth Sauer showcases the value of a literary critical and cultural account thereof, uncovering, historicizing, and reviewing a rich array of contributions by British, English, and Anglo-American poets, preachers, polemicists, and printers. The casebook studies and alternative canon that make up her study reveal just how vital the transatlantic context and the traffic in books were for the development of the nascent English nation. Among the authors examined are Edmund Spenser, Richard Hakluyt, Francis Bacon, John Winthrop, John Eliot, Roger Williams, Anne Bradstreet, John Milton, John Bunyan, George Fox, William Penn, and Daniel Defoe. Over a century's worth of literary and cultural evidence confirms that research into the early modern wave of nation formation, with its ideological coordinates and cultural mythmaking, enriches understanding of England's protean identity.
Reviews / Votes
'Elizabeth Sauer's Milton, Toleration, and Nationhood (CUP, 2014) established her as a distinguished scholar of the representation of nationhood in early modern literature. In this brilliant successor, her focus is on English national consciousness and identity formation, seen through the prism of encounters with America. This book is a triumph of scholarship.' Gordon Campbell, Fellow in Renaissance Studies, University of Leicester 'A fascinating, innovative argument for the ways in which representations of the Atlantic World shaped the formation of English nationhood during the seventeenth century, ranging from Ireland to New England and encompassing an excitingly diverse range of writers from Milton and Bunyan to Anne Bradstreet and William Penn. Nicholas McDowell, Professor of Early Modern Literature and Thought, University of ExeterMore details
Language
English
Place of publication
Cambridge
United Kingdom
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Illustrations
Worked examples or Exercises
ISBN-13
978-1-009-77811-4 (9781009778114)
Copyright in bibliographic data is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or its licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions
Elizabeth Sauer
Early Modern Transatlantic Encounters and the Formation of English National Identity
Book
approx. 09/2026
Cambridge University Press
€136.50
Not yet published
Person
Elizabeth Sauer is Distinguished Professor at Brock University; Honored Scholar of the Milton Society of America; and Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada. Her previous Cambridge University Press publications include the edited collection Emergent Nation: Early Modern British Literature in Transition, 1660-1714 (2019), Milton, Toleration, and Nationhood (2014), and The New Milton Criticism (co-edited with Peter C. Herman, 2012).
Content
Introduction: crosscurrents; 1. Plus ultra: Great Britain, Ireland, and new found lands; 2. Revisiting the city upon a hill: puritan migrants, English exceptionalism, and Israel redivivus; 3. The tongues, arts, and arguments of the contact zone; 4. Bloodlines and transatlantic relations; 5. Milton's new worlds; 6. Holy experiments and the Anglo-American literary landscape; Coda: the book abroad.