Abstract

This essay considers the largely ignored presence of Chaucer and texts in the Chaucerian tradition in seventeenth- and early-eighteenth-century New England. It focuses on Cotton Mather, Anne Bradstreet, and Nathaniel Ward, writers who had connections to each other. Mather, Bradstreet, and Ward engage with Chaucer and the Chaucerian tradition to forge relationships between past and present, between old and new, as they establish positions of textual, political, and spiritual authority. Chaucer and texts associated with him play key roles in their processes of shaping distinctively colonial religio-political visions and developing modes of New English identity vis-à-vis Old England.

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