New Views of New England - by Martha J McNamara & Georgia B Barnhill (Hardcover)
About this item
Highlights
- Beautifully illustrated, this collection of essays will introduce the reader to a rich, surprising, thought-provoking, and entirely new view of early New England.
- About the Author: Martha J. McNamara, author of From Tavern to Courthouse: Architecture and Ritual in American Law, 1658-1860, is director of the New England Arts and Architecture Program in the Department of Art at Wellesley College.
- 279 Pages
- History, United States
Description
About the Book
Essays on the archaeology of seventeenth-century Maine settlements, the geographical knowledge of Salem sailors and ship captains, the mid-eighteenth-century cartographic depictions of Boston, and the built environment of Maine in the early nineteenth century all place New England into the broader purview of a transoceanic movement of people, ideas, and objects.Book Synopsis
Beautifully illustrated, this collection of essays will introduce the reader to a rich, surprising, thought-provoking, and entirely new view of early New England. Eleven essays written by historians, archaeologists, art and architectural historians, and literary scholars recast our understanding of New England by setting its material and visual culture in new contexts. Essays on the archaeology of seventeenth-century Maine settlements, the geographical knowledge of Salem sailors and ship captains, the mid-eighteenth-century cartographic depictions of Boston, and the built environment of Maine in the early nineteenth century all place New England into the broader purview of a transoceanic movement of people, ideas, and objects.
About the Author
Martha J. McNamara, author of From Tavern to Courthouse: Architecture and Ritual in American Law, 1658-1860, is director of the New England Arts and Architecture Program in the Department of Art at Wellesley College. Georgia B. Barnhill is the founding director of the Center for Historic American Visual Culture at the American Antiquarian Society.