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Dry Bones and Indian Sermons

Praying Indians in Colonial America

Dry Bones and Indian Sermons

Praying Indians in Colonial America

This item is a print on demand title and will be dispatched in 1-3 weeks.

Hardback

£120.00

Publisher: Cornell University Press
ISBN: 9780801442063
Number of Pages: 272
Published: 27/02/2004
Width: 15.2 cm
Height: 22.9 cm

Native converts to Christianity, dubbed "praying Indians" by seventeenth-century English missionaries, have long been imagined as benign cultural intermediaries between English settlers and "savages." More recently, praying Indians have been dismissed as virtual inventions of the colonists: "good" Indians used to justify mistreatment of "bad" ones. In a new consideration of this religious encounter, Kristina Bross argues that colonists used depictions of praying Indians to create a vitally important role for themselves as messengers on an evangelical "errand into the wilderness" that promised divine significance not only for the colonists who had embarked on the errand, but also for their metropolitan sponsors in London.

In Dry Bones and Indian Sermons, Bross traces the response to events such as the English civil wars and Restoration, New England's Antinomian Controversy, and "King Philip's" war. Whatever the figure's significance to English settlers, praying Indians such as Waban and Samuel Ponampam used their Christian identity to push for status and meaning in the colonial order. Through her focused attention to early evangelical literature and to that literature's historical and cultural contexts, Bross demonstrates how the people who inhabited, manipulated, and consumed the praying Indian identity found ways to use it for their own, disparate purposes.

Kristina Bross

Kristina Bross is Associate Professor of English at Purdue University.