Inventing Americans in the age of discovery
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<n64f0cd503101498e995f9915a9b775a6b3>
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"Indians--First contact with Europeans--Historiography" |
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<n64f0cd503101498e995f9915a9b775a6b4>
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"America--Discovery and exploration--Historiography" |
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<n64f0cd503101498e995f9915a9b775a6b6>
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"NL-AmRIJ" |
| schema:value | "203902" |
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<n64f0cd503101498e995f9915a9b775a6b1>
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"English language--Rhetoric" |
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<n64f0cd503101498e995f9915a9b775a6b2>
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"1500-1650" |
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<n64f0cd503101498e995f9915a9b775a6b7>
| schema:text | Introduction: encounter, invention, narration -- Narrating encounter: The book of John Mandeville -- Translation, compilation, and triangulation: Richard Eden's invention of English discovery -- Evolutions of racial discourse: George Best and the narration of English-Inuit encounters, 1576-1578 -- Bruites and conspiracies: Ralph Lane's narration of native counter-intelligence -- "[Y]et hee so demeaned himselfe": John Smith's confidence games -- Terror and tears in New England: gender, violence, victimhood, and American identity -- Conclusion: the significance of encounter from an early Americanist perspective. |
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aat:300195187 |
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<n64f0cd503101498e995f9915a9b775a6b5>
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"America--Early accounts to 1600--History and criticism" |