Introduction
1: The Sweetest Meat, the Bitterest Poison
2: A Most Unquiet Hiding Place
3: The Misgovernment of Woman's Tongue
4: "Publick Fathers" and Cursing Sons
5: Saying and Unsaying
6: The Tongue is a Witch
Epilogue
Appendix: Litigation over Speech in Massachusetts, 1630-1692
Jane Kamensky is Assistant Professor of American History at Brandeis University and author of The Colonial Mosaic: American Women, 1600-1760 (OUP, 1995).
"'Speech history' is a topic scarcely imagined as recently as a few
years ago. But now, with Jane Kamensky's pathbreaking new book in
hand, scholars and students of the American past must take it very
seriously indeed. With the utmost care, with great interpretive
finesse, and in consistently sparkling prose, Kamensky shows us a
new side of that venerable target--colonial New England--and
provides as well an excellent model for other studies of other
places."--John Demos, Yale University
"Jane Kamensky's Governing the Tongue is a fascinating study of the
spoken word in seventeenth-century New England. At once
meticulously researched and elegantly argued, it combines trenchant
analysis with writing so lively and fresh that it is a must read
not only for early American scholars but for anyone interested in
an absorbing account of the relationship between speech and
power."--Carol Karlsen, Harvard Divinity School
"Recovering the sounds in our silent sources is one of the most
challenging tasks facing historians. Jane Kamensky has been
enormously resourceful in her seeking and finding an astonishing
range of ways to do this. Recreating the pervasive
ranked-and-gendered hierarchisms of early America for our
epistemically equalitarian world is another daunting task which
Jane Kamensky has most persuasively accomplished. This is a highly
original work that synthesizes of a
vast body of historiographical and theoretical scholarship into a
compelling narrative--for which readers will be immeasurably
grateful."--Rhys Isaac, LaTrobe University, Melbourne,
Australia
"Governing the Tongue is an orignal piece of scholarship. And the
gravity of the discussion is leavened by Kamensky's occasional
what-do-I-think-is-happening questions, which have the welcome
effect of making the reader a participant in her historical
quest."--Boston Globe
"This intelligent book about the power of speech indeed provides a
new perspective on some of the major events of the colonies' first
decades."--Times Literary Supplement
"[T]he very act of speaking and the structures and boundaries
governing public expression have remained unexplored. Jane Kamensky
movens into this space with skill and insight, navigating carefully
the methodological problem of locating authentic, oral voices in
old written records."--American Historical Review
"Kamensky's fascinating exploration of the power of language to
shape Puritan society explains just how words acquired the weight
of action in early New England...This is a brilliant book,
beautifully written, about the palpable power of language in a
'hearful' society."--Law and History Review
"This innovative, well-argued, and exceptionally well written
treatment of a neglected topic deserves a place on the bookshelf of
anyone who cares about the relationships among speech and gender,
power and politics, language and society."--Language in Society
"Few books are this artful or elegant in their literary
style...[W]e are much in Kamensky's debt for demonstrating the
social valences of speech."--Journal of American History
"Jane Kamensky's Governing the Tongue is a civilized, delightful,
and thoughtful study of the rise and fall of the Puritans' effort
to control speech...[G]ood language, easy complexity of thought,
and a fine ability to synthesize a huge volume of recent work on
early New England."--Journal of Social History
"[This book] adds a useful new dimension to the discussion of
gender and language: not only the structure of our language but
also the ways we are encouraged--or not--to use that language to
contribute to our sense of who we are, who we should be, and the
social world we live in...Some of the characters will be familiar
to students of American history, but the fresh lens of speech
history sheds new light on their familiar stories."--The Women's
Review of
Books
"In this work...a sensitivity to language in history complements
the author's sensitivity to language in the writing of history...It
is a mark of the grace and ambition of this artfully constructed
book that its monographic richness inspires synthetic desires...We
will continue to keep talking about those Puritans, but now we will
do so with a humility born of a rich appreciation of how they
themselves talked, and listened. This is a linguistic turn we
should
all take."--Reviews in American History
"Kamensky offers us a book impressive not only for its graceful
writing and synthesis but also for its remarkable sensitivity to
her subject's complexity."--Journal of Church and State
"What is so refreshing about Governing the Tongue is how well and
artfully it is written...[H]er writing style is tight, imaginative,
and beautifully controlled. To read both a writer and historian of
such promise is a rare and most welcome double pleasure."--The New
England Quarterly
"An exceptional book that elucidates the idiosyncracies of
seventeenth-century Puritan culture while, at the same time,
illuminating how Puritan dilemmas relate to our own."--Connecticut
History
"While many historians have told the story of the Salem witch
trials, Jane Kamensky's fascinating retelling argues that the Salem
trials--which resulted in the execution of 19 (probably) innocent
man and women--marked the first and last time in early New
England's history that magistrates did not suppress the accusations
of young women against their elders. The irony is brutal. These
were not the good old days."--Books & Culture
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