The Francis Daniel Pastorius Reader
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The Francis Daniel Pastorius Reader by Patrick Erben
A comprehensive overview of the writings of Francis Daniel Pastorius, founder of Germantown, lawyer, educator, and early modern polymath. Includes many of Pastorius's unpublished manuscripts as well as new translations of German-language tracts printed in his lifetime.“The Pastorius Reader is an important contribution to scholarship, making available a wide selection of Pastorius’s most important writings while helping readers contextualize the works’ significance to early American cultural history”
—Alexander Lawrence Ames Early American Literature
“The Francis Daniel Pastorius Reader presents, for the first time, a thoroughly accessible panoply of Pastorius’s work, opening a window into the intellectual world of a fascinating early American literary figure.”
—Alexander Lawrence Ames Early American Literature
“The broader significance of this volume is that it expands available work in non-English languages in early Pennsylvania and, as the editors rightly point out, it provides material with which readers can explore the mentality between pietism and Enlightenment, as well as the mentality of an observant immigrant living in, assessing, and preserving two worlds.”
—Aaron Spencer Fogleman American Literary History
“Francis Daniel Pastorius led an amazing life. As lawyer and public official, scholar and writer, poet and teacher, he did much to shape the world of colonial Pennsylvania. This excellent reader offers a vivid and comprehensive introduction to his work, his world, and his writings—from his massive commonplace books to his poems and letters.”
—Anthony T. Grafton, author of Bring Out Your Dead: The Past as Revelation
“An important project that provides the most valuable material on Pastorius and the intellectual, academic, social, and economic fabric of communal life in early Pennsylvania.”
—Hermann Wellenreuther, author of Citizens in a Strange Land: A Study of German-American Broadsides and Their Meaning for Germans in North America, 1730–1830
“This skillfully edited volume illuminates the wide-ranging work of a single seventeenth-century German-speaking immigrant who was an intellectual and a civic leader. From promotional literature to poetry, commonplace books to practical advice, the writings published here reveal how knowledge was produced and circulated in early Pennsylvania. The editors bring together historical evidence that encourages us to ask new questions about the nature of the early modern Atlantic world.”
—Rosalind J. Beiler, author of Immigrant and Entrepreneur: The Atlantic World of Caspar Wistar, 1650–1750
“Here, finally, is a full-fledged, expertly edited and introduced collection of the whole range of writings by Francis Daniel Pastorius, the important Pennsylvania immigrant and founder of Germantown, from his pioneering critique of American slavery to his prolific work as a legal and religious thinker, multilingual polymath and educator, collector of aphoristic wisdom, and author of poetry and geographic descriptions.”
—Werner Sollors, author of Challenges of Diversity: Essays on America
“For a long time, Pastorius was seen as a kind of patron saint of the German-American community, remembered for his great poem ‘Hail to Posterity!’ but otherwise little studied. This thorough and appealing English edition of his works establishes him as one of the leading minds of early America. The German friend of William Penn is now eminently quotable as a pioneer in many fields of knowledge.”
—Frank Trommler, coeditor of The German-American Encounter: Conflict and Cooperation Between Two Cultures 1800–2000
“The editors’ careful selection of Francis Daniel Pastorius’s writings, showcasing his thought, experience, and hope for settlement in early America, invites twenty-first-century students and scholars to explore Pastorius’s work and engage with it more fully in all of its range and complexity. Readers will reap the rewards of adding to their knowledge of Pastorius as an extraordinary thinker, author, and doer in the North Atlantic world of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.”
—Marianne S. Wokeck, author of Trade in Strangers: The Beginnings of Mass Migration to North America
Patrick M. Erben is Professor of English at the University of West Georgia and the author of A Harmony of the Spirits: Translation and the Language of Community in Early Pennsylvania.
Alfred L. Brophy is D. Paul Jones Chairholder in Law at the University of Alabama.
Margo M. Lambert is Associate Professor of History at the University of Cincinnati Blue Ash College.
| SKU | Unavailable |
| ISBN 13 | 9780271083285 |
| ISBN 10 | 027108328X |
| Title | The Francis Daniel Pastorius Reader |
| Author | Patrick Erben |
| Series | Max Kade Research Institute |
| Condition | Unavailable |
| Binding Type | Hardback |
| Publisher | Pennsylvania State University Press |
| Year published | 2019-08-02 |
| Number of pages | 480 |
| Cover note | Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary. |
| Note | Unavailable |