The Eliot Tracts: With Letters from John Eliot to Thomas Thorowgood and Richard Baxter
By (Author) Michael P. Clark
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th November 2003
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Religious mission and Religious Conversion
History of the Americas
History of religion
Indigenous peoples
Social and cultural history
266.00899707
Hardback
464
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
907g
The Eliot Tracts collects for the first time a series of 11 documents published in London between 1643 and 1671 that describe missionary work by the British among the Indians in New England. Written by John Eliot, Thomas Shepard, and other intellectual and political leaders among the colonists, these tracts constitute the most detailed and sustained record of missionary activity by the English in the New World in the first century of settlement. They are also one of our richest sources of ethnographic information about the Indians of Southern New England in the 17th century as recorded by the British settlers. In addition to the tracts, the volume contains two letters written by John Eliot that argue for the millennialist significance of the missionary work and so situate the missionaries' project within one of the most important theological debates of the time. The introduction establishes the historical and theological context in which the tracts were written and published. The text of the tracts and letters is that of the original 17th-century publications, including interlinear English/Algonquian translations. Functional variations in relative font size and spacing have been retained to reproduce the visual organization of the original documents, though simplified and regularized across all the tracts to give the volume a visual conformity and coherence. An index allows readers to trace the record of particular towns and individual proselytes and missionaries across the 30 years covered by the tracts, and to follow the contributions of the different authors as they recount their experiences over that period.
Michael P. Clark has collected the Eliot Tracts in a single edition for the first time. This edition, which beautifully reproduces the title pages of the original tracts, is a long-awaited and much-needed contribution to early American studies.-The New England Quarterly
The Eliot Tracts reprinted in this volume fully describe Eliot's missionary endeavor. They are thus the New England counterpart of The Jesuit Relations of the French colonies and the Spanish mission activities described in narratives of New Spain. Missionaries' records and narratives, used cautiously, can be good sources for ethnographic information about indigenous peoples. Researchers mine them with the knowledge that missionaries' observations have been filtered through preconceptions and culturally shaped perceptions and judgments. These documents may be even more useful for understanding the period and the encounter between Native and European peoples. Thus, this first gathering together in one volume of the serially and separately published Tracts will be useful to historians and anthropologists studying Native-European relations in the northern colonies....Colonial history and Native America collections will want this book. Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates and above.-Choice
"Michael P. Clark has collected the Eliot Tracts in a single edition for the first time. This edition, which beautifully reproduces the title pages of the original tracts, is a long-awaited and much-needed contribution to early American studies."-The New England Quarterly
"The Eliot Tracts reprinted in this volume fully describe Eliot's missionary endeavor. They are thus the New England counterpart of The Jesuit Relations of the French colonies and the Spanish mission activities described in narratives of New Spain. Missionaries' records and narratives, used cautiously, can be good sources for ethnographic information about indigenous peoples. Researchers mine them with the knowledge that missionaries' observations have been filtered through preconceptions and culturally shaped perceptions and judgments. These documents may be even more useful for understanding the period and the encounter between Native and European peoples. Thus, this first gathering together in one volume of the serially and separately published Tracts will be useful to historians and anthropologists studying Native-European relations in the northern colonies....Colonial history and Native America collections will want this book. Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates and above."-Choice
MICHAEL P. CLARK is Associate Executive Vice Chancellor for Academic Planning and Professor of English and Comparative Literature at the University of California, Irvine.