The Puritan Origins of the American Self Sacvan Bercovitch

Format:
Paperback
Publication date:
28 Apr 2011
ISBN:
9780300172416
Dimensions:
260 pages: 234 x 156 x 18mm

"Perhaps the most penetrating examination yet published of 'the sources of our obsessive concern with the meaning of America.'"--Jack P. Greene, "History"
"The most valuable achievement in colonial American literature since the best work of Perry Miller."--David Levin, "William and Mary Quarterly"
"A brave and brilliant book...that is the most significant and far-reaching contribution to the theory of American literature in recent years."--Alan Trachtenberg, "Partisan Review"
"A study which reaches with daring ease from the Bible and Augustine to Emerson and Whitman... [and] offers an agenda for the next several decades of scholarly work on colonial religious studies."--John F. Wilson, "Theology Today"
"[Bercovitch] casts a dazzling light on the myth of America and the conundrums of individuality and community that are the core of the American character."--Michael Zuckerman, "Early American Literature"

"'Perhaps the most penetrating examination yet published of 'the sources of our obsessive concern with the meaning of America." (Jack P. Greene, History) 'The most valuable achievement in colonial American literature since the best work of Perry Miller.' (David Levin, William and Mary Quarterly) 'A brave and brilliant book... that is the most significant and far-reaching contribution to the theory of American literature in recent years.' (Alan Trachtenberg, Partisan Review) 'A study which reaches with daring ease from the Bible and Augustine to Emerson and Whitman... and offers an agenda for the next several decades of scholarly work on colonial religious studies.' (John F. Wilson, Theology Today) 'Bercovitch casts a dazzling light on the myth of America and the conundrums of individuality and community that are the core of the American character.' (Michael Zuckerman, Early American Literature) 'A brilliant display of learning in the service of ideas... illuminating as with the sudden light of revelation the nineteenth-century landscape and its heroes.' (John Seelye, American Literature) 'An original and provocative exploration not just of a Puritan literary form but of the whole mode of national self-consciousness in America.' (Michael D. Bell, Chronicle of Higher Education)"