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Transatlantic Puritanism and American Singularities

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Hartford Puritanism. Thomas Hooker, Samuel Stone, and their terrifying God. By BairdTipson. (Oxford Studies in Historical Theology.) Pp. xvii + 476. New York–Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2015. £47.99. 978 0 19 021252 0

Sympathetic Puritans. Calvinist fellow feeling in early New England. By Abram C.Van Engen. (Religion in America.) Pp. xii + 311. New York–Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2015. £47.99. 978 0 19 937963 7

Inventing Eden. Primitivism, millennialism, and the making of New England. By Zachary McLeodHutchins. Pp. x + 329. New York–Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014. $78. 978 0 19 999814 2

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 January 2017

DAVID D. HALL*
Affiliation:
Harvard Divinity School, Cambridge, Ma 02138, USA; e-mail: dhall@hds.harvard.edu

Extract

The taunting question posed in the 1820s by the English critic Sidney Smith, ‘Who reads an American book?’, has long since tumbled into the dustbin of literary history. Yet it continues to reverberate in how Americanists describe the workings of Puritanism in their own country, its presence felt in two respects. One of these is resentment at the indifference to their own work of historians of the Puritan movement in Britain. Another is the assumption among Americanists that the Puritanism of the colonists who arrived in the early seventeenth century was singular in certain respects, be it their sense of ‘errand’, their modifications of Reformed orthodoxy, or perhaps their daring experiment with a congregation-centred polity, the ‘New England Way’. Whenever historians turn to the larger project of Church and State in colonial and modern America, assertions of singularity dominate the telling of our religious history. Do these endeavours warrant returning to Sidney Smith's question and rephrasing it to ask whether Americanists are making the most of European studies of Reformed theology, Puritanism in Britain, and conformity or dissent?

Type
Review Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2017 

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References

1 Shipton, Clifford K., ‘The autobiographical memoranda of John Brock, 1636–1659’, Proceedings of the American Antiquarian Society liii (1943), 97 Google Scholar.