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Skidmore College
American Studies Department

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AM 232H: Hon: New England Begins (3)

TuTh, 2:10-3:30, TLC 308, Mary C. Lynn

A critical examination of the evolution of culture and society in New England during the seventeenth century.  After considering the origins of the Puritan community, the course will explore the ways in which that society changed over the course of the first seventy-five years of settlement, using the resources and methods of a variety of disciplines.  By a culminating investigation of the events of the Salem witchcraft crisis of 1692, questions will be raised as to the impact of those changes and some of the ways in which New Englanders responded to them.  Finally, by studying several historical and literary treatments of the witch trials, we will gain a greater understanding of the interconnections between the past and the present.  (This is an Honors course; it fulfills the social sciences requirement.)