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Imperial Pedagogy: Susanna Rowson's Columbus for Young Ladies

Imperial Pedagogy: Susanna Rowson's Columbus for Young Ladies jenny heil  Texas A&M–Corpus Christi Imperial Pedagogy Susanna Rowson’s Columbus for Young Ladies About a year before Captain James Cook’s infamous death in the Hawaiian Islands in 1779, he sailed into the Pacific Northwest in the hopes of finding a passageway connecting the Atlantic to the Pacific Ocean. Cook believed his discovery would make trade routes between England and America more direct. Until the construction of the Panama Canal in the early twentieth century, merchants from England and New England had to sail around Cape Horn to reach the northwest—where they hoped to collect some of the wealth that Cook’s published accounts suggested was available through the region’s fur trade. One such merchant was Robert Hasw 1 et lhe l, brother of Susanna Has- well Rowson—whose novC el harlotte  Temple (1791) has gained her promi- nence in American literary histories in the past twenty years. During the 1790s, Haswell sailed with the crew of t Che olumbia  Rediviva on fur trade expeditions that, according to Lucinda Joy Herrick, helped to establish Massachusetts’s future economic base. Such ventures in the Pacific kept the New England economy going aer ft the United States broke away from the British mercantile system (Herrick 17, 158). http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Early American Literature University of North Carolina Press

Imperial Pedagogy: Susanna Rowson's Columbus for Young Ladies

Early American Literature , Volume 47 (3) – Oct 26, 2012

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Publisher
University of North Carolina Press
Copyright
Copyright © 2008 The University of North Carolina Press.
ISSN
1534-147X

Abstract

jenny heil  Texas A&M–Corpus Christi Imperial Pedagogy Susanna Rowson’s Columbus for Young Ladies About a year before Captain James Cook’s infamous death in the Hawaiian Islands in 1779, he sailed into the Pacific Northwest in the hopes of finding a passageway connecting the Atlantic to the Pacific Ocean. Cook believed his discovery would make trade routes between England and America more direct. Until the construction of the Panama Canal in the early twentieth century, merchants from England and New England had to sail around Cape Horn to reach the northwest—where they hoped to collect some of the wealth that Cook’s published accounts suggested was available through the region’s fur trade. One such merchant was Robert Hasw 1 et lhe l, brother of Susanna Has- well Rowson—whose novC el harlotte  Temple (1791) has gained her promi- nence in American literary histories in the past twenty years. During the 1790s, Haswell sailed with the crew of t Che olumbia  Rediviva on fur trade expeditions that, according to Lucinda Joy Herrick, helped to establish Massachusetts’s future economic base. Such ventures in the Pacific kept the New England economy going aer ft the United States broke away from the British mercantile system (Herrick 17, 158).

Journal

Early American LiteratureUniversity of North Carolina Press

Published: Oct 26, 2012

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