Cotton Mather’s Spanish Lessons
A Story of Language, Race, and Belonging in the Early Americas
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- $35.99
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- $35.99
Publisher Description
A sweeping history of linguistic and colonial encounter in the early Americas, anchored by the unlikely story of how Boston’s most famous Puritan came to write the first Spanish-language publication in the English New World.
The Boston minister Cotton Mather was the first English colonial to refer to himself as an American. He was also the first to author a Spanish-language publication: La Fe del Christiano (The Faith of the Christian), a Protestant tract intended to evangelize readers across the Spanish Americas. Kirsten Silva Gruesz explores the conditions that produced La Fe del Christiano, from the intimate story of the “Spanish Indian” servants in Mather’s household, to the fragile business of printing and bookselling, to the fraught overlaps of race, ethnicity, and language that remain foundational to ideas of Latina/o/x belonging in the United States today.
Mather’s Spanish project exemplifies New England’s entanglement within a partially Spanish Catholic, largely Indigenous New World. British Americans viewed Spanish not only as a set of linguistic practices, but also as the hallmark of a rival empire and a nascent racial-ethnic category. Guided by Mather’s tract, Gruesz explores English settlers’ turbulent contacts with the people they called “Spanish Indians,” as well as with Black and local native peoples. Tracing colonial encounters from Boston to Mexico, Florida, and the Caribbean, she argues that language learning was intimately tied with the formation of new peoples. Even as Spanish has become the de facto second language of the United States, the story of La Fe del Christiano remains timely and illuminating, locating the roots of latinidad in the colonial system of the early Americas.
Cotton Mather’s Spanish Lessons reinvents our understanding of a key colonial intellectual, revealing notions about language and the construction of race that endure to this day.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
UC Santa Cruz literature professor Gruesz (Ambassadors of Culture) demonstrates in this immersive and eye-opening study that lines between languages and empires in 17th-century America were more fluid than previous historians and literary critics have imagined. In the 1690s, Gruesz explains, New England clergyman Cotton Mather learned Spanish in order to write a religious pamphlet aimed at converting the inhabitants of Spain's colonies to Protestantism. In 1699, La Fe del Christiano (The Faith of the Christian) became the first Spanish-language text published in New England. Gruesz places the pamphlet's composition within the context of "New Puritan Studies," an emerging field that seeks to decenter New England from its long-held position as "the primal scene of national origins," locating it in a far wider Atlantic world encompassing many African, Native American, and European actors and cultures. To that end, Gruesz also mines the historical record for details about a Mather family bondservant known as "Spaniard," who was likely of African, Hispanic, and Indigenous heritage and had lived in Spanish-speaking America. Meticulously researched and elegantly written, this is an essential reconsideration of the historical and contemporary place of the Spanish language and "Brown identity" in the U.S.