About This Book
The book traces the life and times of Anne Bradstreet, detailing her family origins, emigration to New England, and domestic responsibilities. It situates her poetry within the Puritan social and theological context, explaining how religious beliefs, colonial hardship, and gender expectations shaped her voice and reception. Chapters reconstruct village and household life, voyages, friendships, and local politics to show daily realities that informed her verse and prose. It discusses publication history, including her first edition and later collections, and examines themes across miscellaneous poems and elegies. The narrative assesses limitations imposed by the era while mapping her literary legacy and familial connections to later American writers.
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