
By long convention American history began during the early seventeenth century along the Atlantic Seaboard with the English colonies at Jamestown in Virginia & Plymouth in New England From that eastern origin America supposedly expanded westward reaching only the Appalachian mountains by the end of the colonial period In this version of history earlier Spanish & contemporary French settlements seemed irrelevant except as enemies that brought out the best in the English as they remade themselves into Americans Indians appeared only as wild & primitive peoples engaged in an ultimately futile resistance to American destiny & historians formerly treated African slaves in passing as unfortunate aberrations in a fundamentally upbeat story of Englishmen becoming freer & more prosperous by colonizing an abundant continent of free land During the past generation however historians have broadened our understanding of colonial America by adopting both a trans-Atlantic & a trans-continental perspective examining the interplay of Europe Africa & the Americas through the flows of goods people plants animals capital & ideas In this Very Short Introduction Alan Taylor presents the current scholarly understanding of colonial America to a broader audience American colonization derived from a global expansion of European exploration & commerce beginning in the fifteenth century In an Atlantic & global perspective the English had to share the stage with the French Spanish Dutch & Russians each of whom created alternative Americas By comparing the diverse colonies of rival empires Taylor aims to recover what was truly distinctive about the English enterprise in North America In particular he intends to pay greater attention to slavery as central to the economy culture & political thought of the colonists & by taking a Continental approach to restore the importance of native peoples to the colonial story To adapt to the new land the colonists needed the expertise guidance alliance & trade of the Indians who dominated the interior The new historical approach emphasizes the ability of the diverse natives to adapt to the newcomers & to compel concessions from them In sum colonial America produced an unprecedented mixing of radically diverse peoples-African European & Indian-under stressful circumstances for all The colonial intermingling of peoplesmicrobes plants & animals from different continents was unparalleled in speed & volume in global history Everyone had to adjust to a new world of unpredictable social & cultural hybrids that compromised & complicated the ambitious plans of empire-builders ABOUT THE SERIES The Very Short Introductions series from Oxford University Press contains hundreds of titles in almost every subject area These pocket-sized books are the perfect way to get ahead in a new subject quickly Our expert authors combine facts analysis perspective new ideas & enthusiasm to make interesting & challenging topics highly readable