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Governing The Tongue Jane Kamensky (Assistant Professor of History, Assistant Professor of History, Brandeis University)

Governing The Tongue By Jane Kamensky (Assistant Professor of History, Assistant Professor of History, Brandeis University)

Summary

This study explores why the spoken word assumed such importance in the culture of early New England. The author re-examines such famous Puritan events as the Salem witch trials and the banishment of Anne Hutchinson to expose the ever-present fear of what the Puritans called "sins of the tongue.

Governing The Tongue Summary

Governing The Tongue: The Politics of Speech in Early New England by Jane Kamensky (Assistant Professor of History, Assistant Professor of History, Brandeis University)

Colonial New Englanders would have found our modern notions of free speech very strange indeed. Children today shrug off harsh words by chanting "sticks and stones may break my bones but names will never hurt me," but in the seventeenth century people felt differently. "A soft tongue breaketh the bone," they often said. Governing the Tongue explains why the spoken word assumed such importance in the culture of early New England. Author Jane Kamensky re-examines such famous Puritan events as the Salem witch trials and the banishment of Anne Hutchinson to expose the ever-present fear of what the puritans called "sins of the tongue." But even while dangerous or deviant speech was restricted, Kamensky points out, godly speech was continuously praised and promoted. Congregations were told that one should ones voice "like a trumpet" to God and "cry out and cease not." By placing speech at the heart of familiar stories of Puritan New England, Kamensky develops new ideas about the relationship between speech and power both in Puritan New England and, by extension, in our world today.

Governing The Tongue Reviews

a wide-ranging, original and penetrating account of the social meaning of speech in New England between the 1620s and 1690s. ... This is an insightful work, especially so in relation to gender. * David Walker, Critical Theory: General *

About Jane Kamensky (Assistant Professor of History, Assistant Professor of History, Brandeis University)

Jane Kamensky is Assistant Professor of American History at Brandeis University and author of The Colonial Mosaic: American Women, 1600-1760 (OUP, 1995).

Table of Contents

Introduction 1: The Sweetest Meat, the Bitterest Poison 2: A Most Unquiet Hiding Place 3: The Misgovernment of Woman's Tongue 4: "Publick Fathers" and Cursing Sons 5: Saying and Unsaying 6: The Tongue is a Witch Epilogue Appendix: Litigation over Speech in Massachusetts, 1630-1692

Additional information

NPB9780195090802
9780195090802
0195090802
Governing The Tongue: The Politics of Speech in Early New England by Jane Kamensky (Assistant Professor of History, Assistant Professor of History, Brandeis University)
New
Hardback
Oxford University Press Inc
1998-03-19
304
N/A
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