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John Foss, barbary captivity, and strains of American thought in the eighteenth century -

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dc.contributor.author Larson, Ian Benjamin,
dc.date.accessioned 2017-08-30T13:57:06Z
dc.date.available 2017-08-30T13:57:06Z
dc.date.issued 2014
dc.date.submitted 2014
dc.identifier.other b18336899
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10938/10546
dc.description Thesis. M.A. American University of Beirut. Center for Arab and Middle Eastern Studies, 2014. T:6211
dc.description Advisor : Dr. Adam Waterman, Assistant Professor, English ; Members of Committee : Dr. Alexis Wick, Assistant Professor, History and Archaeology ; Dr. Alex Lubin, Professor and Chair, Department of American Studies, University of New Mexico.
dc.description Includes bibliographical references (leaves 137-148)
dc.description.abstract This work is an attempt to draw out the ideological underpinnings of A Journal of the Captivity and Sufferings of John Foss, the 1798 captivity narrative of the Massachusetts sailor John Foss. This study undertakes to demonstrate how the Journal draws on motivating secular and religious thought to make sense of the “embarrassments” John Foss and his fellow American captives endured at the hands of their Muslim masters in Algiers. By identifying the American nation with the sufferers of biblical history, Foss mediated the weakness endemic to the United States in his time and appealed to an afflictive model of progress. This teleological model sustained the period’s rising “secular optimism,” and the Journal’s narrative binds the captive’s fate with that of the nation while demonstrating an important discursive use of Islam in the early United States. The experiences in Algiers in the 1780s and 1790s made manifest many of the inadequacies of the American government, military, and social institutions in what Robert Allison has characterized as “a time of fear.” The roughly three-decade course of American Barbary captivity that culminated in Tripoli in the early nineteenth century, however, would transport the nation to an ideologically significant “time of triumph.” This progression describes an arc resembling that followed by the English in the previous century. As Gerald MacLean and Nabil Matar have written of seventeenth-century Britain, “the nightmare of captivity gave way to the dream of empire.” John Foss’s Journal appeared at a critical juncture of a similar transition in the American relationship to the world of Islam. The severity of Foss’s abjection forced him to confront the modest exigencies of American identity in the early years of American independence. More important, however is that Foss also embraced the optimistic thrust of many American ideologies emerging at the time he wrote the Journal. Reconciling th
dc.format.extent 1 online resource (viii, 148 leaves) ; 30cm
dc.language.iso eng
dc.relation.ispartof Theses, Dissertations, and Projects
dc.subject.classification T:006211
dc.subject.lcsh Foss, John, -1800. A journal of the captivity and sufferings of John Foss, several years a prisoner at Algiers.
dc.subject.lcsh Slavery -- Algeria -- Early works to 1800.
dc.subject.lcsh Theology.
dc.subject.lcsh Algeria -- History -- 1516-1830.
dc.subject.lcsh Algeria -- Poetry.
dc.subject.lcsh Algeria -- Foreign relations -- United States.
dc.subject.lcsh United States -- Foreign relations -- Algeria.
dc.title John Foss, barbary captivity, and strains of American thought in the eighteenth century -
dc.type Thesis
dc.contributor.department Faculty of Arts and Sciences.
dc.contributor.department Center for Arab and Middle Eastern Studies,
dc.contributor.institution American University of Beirut.


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