Image for Creatures of Empire: how domestic animals transformed early America

Creatures of Empire: how domestic animals transformed early America

See all formats and editions

When we think of the key figures of early American history, we think of explorers, or pilgrims, or Native Americans--not cattle, or goats, or swine.

But as Virginia DeJohn Anderson reveals in this brilliantly original account of colonists in New England and the Chesapeake region, livestock played a vitally important role in the settling of the New World.Livestock, Anderson writes, were a central factor in the cultural clash between colonists and Indians as well as a driving force in the expansion west.

By bringing livestock across the Atlantic, colonists believed that they provided the means to realize America's potential, a goal that Indians, who lacked domestic animals, had failed to accomplish.

Settlers believed that Indians who learned to keep livestock would also advance along the path toward civility and Christian faith.

Butcolonists failed to anticipate that the animals they hoped would convert Indians instead generated friction between the two people as Indians encountered free-ranging livestock at almost every turn, often trespassing in their cornfields.

Moreover, concerned about feeding their growing populations andcommitted to a style of husbandry that required far more space than they had expected, colonists could see no alternative but to appropriate Indian land.

This created tensions that reached the boiling point with King Philip's War and Bacon's Rebellion. And it established a pattern that would repeat time and again over the next two centuries.A stunning account that presents our history in a truly new light, Creatures of Empire restores a vital element of our past, illuminating one of the great forces of colonization and the expansion westward.

Read More
Available
£41.00
Add Line Customisation
Available on VLeBooks
Add to List
Product Details
Oxford University Press
0198035969 / 9780198035961
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
11/11/2004
English
322 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%