Captive Histories: Puritan Captivity Narratives and Native Stories from the Era of the Colonial Wars, 1675-1760

The following research papers were written by students in the 2007 seminar, "Captive Histories: Puritan Captivity Narratives and Native Stories from the Era of the Colonial Wars, 1675-1760," under the supervision of Kevin Sweeney, Professor of History and American Studies at Amherst College, where he has taught since 1989.

"Written by himself... Written by herself" American Life Stories: The Northern United States 1780-1860

In the years between the Revolution and the Civil War, thousands of Americans wrote autobiographies and reminiscences. Successful men wrote their life stories to explain, celebrate, or justify their wealth or prominence. The pious recounted their soul-struggles and spiritual awakenings. Convicted murderers dictated their biographies in the days before they went to the gallows. Prisoners in the state penitentiary accounted for what had brought them there. Other Americans kept detailed diaries that explained their lives to themselves.

America's Environmental Histories

In this seminar, students investigated the roles that both natural and built environments have played in the development of American society. Over the course of the semester, the class moved from broad studies and images of America's environments to local histories of the Blackstone River Valley's natural and built landscapes. Over the first several weeks, the class discussed the "big ideas"- Wilderness and Landscape- that have shaped Americans' relationships with their many environments.