330 likes | 615 Views
Errand into the Wilderness. The Unlikely Origins of American Democracy. Salem Possessed. February 1692, Samuel Parris’s daughter possessed - Sarah Good Arrests did not calm fears - Court of Oyer and Terminer Trial of George Jacobs. The implications. Ooops! 1697 – Day of Atonement
E N D
Errand into the Wilderness The Unlikely Origins of American Democracy
Salem Possessed February 1692, Samuel Parris’s daughterpossessed- Sarah Good Arrests did not calm fears- Court of Oyer and Terminer Trial of George Jacobs
The implications • Ooops!1697 – Day of Atonement 1711 – Restitution to survivors and heirs 2. Reason triumphant?- Church/state separation- Natural Philosophy (science)- Age of Enlightenment Nathaniel Hawthorne Last gasp of the medieval world?
I. Puritan Paradox Undemocratic, theocratic society lays the foundations of American democracy, progressive tradition
A. Puritanism and American Culture 1. “cultural empire” 2. Emphasize education, reform & “progress” through cooperative action • Abolition • Temperance • Feminism • Transcendentalism/Unitarianism • communalism • Evangelicalism
3. “A Model of Christian Charity”John Winthrop, 1630 The Mission: “City on a Hill” • Americans chosen by God • American “exceptionalism”
4. When the “mission” fails… - recrimination, paranoia- tendency to persecute- Failure contradicts “covenant” The Crucible- Arthur Miller Joseph McCarthy
A. Something about Mary • Reformation in England 1535 Henry VIII “Bloody” Mary I Elizabeth I James I
B. The Ghost of John Calvin • Reform of the High Church- hierarchy v. assembly What is a “church”?
2. Predestination a. Advantages- natural egalitarianismantinomianism Religion as Revolution
C. Your cheatin’ heart 1. Cheat #1 a. The Covenant John Cotton, 1636
2. Cheat #2 Conversion process [prominent role in American Protestantism]
3. Cheat #3 Visible Saints / the ElectMax Weber
D. Cheaters sometimes prosper • Full church membershipa. receive sacraments b. baptize children (membership) c. vote on minister d. political rights Egalitarian, democratic(?)
III. Things fall apart The failure of the Puritan Mission
A. Internal division • Egalitarian but intolerant Roger Williams Anne Hutchinson
B. Prosperity • Diverse New England economy - rise of the “Yankee” trader Whaling and commercial centers
C. Population Growth 4. Westward migration- shrinking farms 5. “Visible Saints” thing comes back to bite them- God’s favor - capitalist ethic conquers communal control
D. Judgment Day deferred • English Commonwealth, 1649-60 2. Cromwell’s betrayal 3. the Restoration, 1660 Oliver Cromwell
E. Loss of Confidence • Lack of conversion (3rd generation)- fewer church members- fewer voters 2. “Halfway” Covenant (S. Stoddard) cheat 4 - vote, but no sacraments By 1700, Puritan church not so pure
A. The Cheese and the Worms • “Now my charms are all o'erthrown”- Prospero, The Tempest - Malleus Maleficarum1486- Folk knowledge; “magic”- rise of Modernity
B. Wrath of God • King Philip’s War, 1675-76 • 1680s smallpox epidemic • 1684 – Royal Colonyloss of political control
C. Satan’s Sisters • Tituba West Indian • Sarah Good homeless beggar • Sarah Osborne elderly; alone; poor church attendance • Martha Corey had illegitimate, mixed-race child; opinionated • Rebecca Nurse elderly; dispute with previous minister • Bridget Bishop 3 husbands; non-demure; worked in pubs
D. Do we know why? • Lysergic acid (LSD) “Little” Ice Age
2. Economic/social rivalry • Village v. Town- pro v. anti Parris- Putnams v. Porters- traditional v. mercantile
E. The Upshot • Puritans fail “upward” • Communal ideals build democratic tradition - rights based on inclusion in community - participatory democracy basis of independence
3. Theological conformity (covenant) & individualism (Visible Saints)- economic liberty & social contract 4. New England fertile ground for American liberal tradition Abolition Feminism Transcendentalism Temperance Public Education Public Services
Red vs. Blue regions? Competing definitions of “Liberty”