Contents
Introduction: William Penn and his Worlds – Andrew R. Murphy and
John Smolenski
Part I Materials, History, Memory
1.The Elusive Body of William Penn - Elizabeth Milroy
2.Where William Penn Slept (And Why it Matters) - Catharine Dann
Roeber
3.Beyond the Bounds: Exploitation and Empire in the First Map of
Pennsylvania - Emily Mann
Part II Irish Worlds
4.William Penn, William Petty, and Surveying: the Irish Connection
- Marcus Gallo
5.The Irish Worlds of William Penn: Culture, Conflict and
Connections - Audrey Horning
6.The Roads to and From Cork: The Irish Origins of William Penn’s
Theory of Religious Toleration - Andrew R. Murphy
Part III Restoration Worlds
7.New Worlds and Holy Experiments in the Restoration Literature of
Milton, Bunyan, and Penn - Elizabeth Sauer
8.William Penn and James II - Scott Sowerby
9.William Penn, German Pietist(?) - Patrick M. Erben
Part IV American Worlds
10.“Rancontyn Marenit”: Lenape Peacemaking Before William Penn -
Michael Goode
11.William Penn, John Winthrop, and Colonial Political Science -
Alexander Mazzaferro
12.Religion and Revolution in New England: 1689 - Sarah A. Morgan
Smith
Quaker Worlds
13.William Penn as Preface Writer, Historian, and Controversialist
- Catie Gill
14.Quakers and Political Discernment in the Early Restoration -
Adrian Chastain Weimer
15.From Puritan to Quaker: Mary Dyer and Puritan-Quaker Conversion
in the Seventeenth-Century Atlantic - Rachel Love Monroy
Part V Imperial Worlds
16.Pennsylvania’s Religious Freedom in Comparative Colonial Context
- Evan Haefeli
17.William Penn and Security Communities: A Career - Patrick
Cecil
18.William Penn’s Imperial Landscape: Improvement, Political
Economy, and Colonial Agriculture in the Pennsylvania Project -
Shuichi Wanibuchi
ANDREW R. MURPHY is a professor of political science at Rutgers
University, New Brunswick, New Jersey. He is the author of numerous
titles, including William Penn: A Life.
JOHN SMOLENSKI is an associate professor of history at the
University of California, Davis. He is the author of Friends and
Strangers: The Making of a Creole Culture in Colonial
Pennsylvania.
"This marvelous new examination of William Penn’s many worlds gives
us this remarkable man anew."
*University of Pennsylvania*
"Readers may find themselves drawn into Penn’s tempestuous
trans-Atlantic world. Such readers may want to go on to read The
Worlds of William Penn, a collection of 18 essays on Penn and his
'worlds' (American, English, Irish and Quaker). In one illuminating
essay, historian Scott Sowerby notes how unlikely the alliance
between the Quaker Penn and the Catholic James II was."
*Wall Street Journal*
"This collection offers much to consider in the history and
historiography of William Penn...[A] must-have for anyone
interested in William Penn and, even more so, in the state of Penn
historiography. The inclusion of material history and the Native
American perspective offer particular strength to the overall value
of the book, which offers new interpretations from a variety of
fresh angles. Scholars of Penn, Quakerism, Pennsylvania, religion,
and the British Empire will be engaging with this collection and
these scholars for years to come."
*H-Net*
"Like work completed over the last four decades and currently
underway, this volume contributes important perspectives and
research on the complicated history of William Penn and his
worlds."
*Pennsylvania History*
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