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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 5 page paper which examines the
information presented in Gary B. Nash et al.’s Part One of “The American People.” Part
one deals with “A Colonizing People, 1492-1776.” Bibliography lists 3 additional
sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: JR7_RAnash.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
the more civilized, or presumably civilized, nations take it upon themselves to control and develop other nations. We have seen this demonstrated time and time again, and perhaps no more
aggressively than here in America as our forefathers left Europe to find freedom in a new land that they would control and develop. In "The American People" by Gary B.
Nash et al. we gain many different insights into the colonizing of this land. In the following paper we examine some of the perspectives and insights offered by Nash et
al. in the first section of the book titled "A Colonizing People, 1492-1776." A Colonizing People Nash et al.s presentation of the colonizing people of America is incredibly
thorough, but brief at the same time. This is due to the fact that a great deal of information is presented in a relatively small space. For example, this entire
section is broken down into five separate sections: Three Worlds Meet, Colonizing a Continent, Mastering the New World, The Maturing of Colonial Society, and Bursting the Colonial Bonds. In light
of this fact there is a great deal of information that is presented in very brief outline. Though brief, in some respects, the overall content provides a good overview
of the basic foundations of colonizing and from the perspective of this particular writer there were no surprises in terms of what was presented. The information, though perhaps not overtly
generally known to many people, was consistent with information this writer previously possessed. In truth, nothing really comes as a surprise to this reader in terms of the motives, needs,
greed, or actions of the early Americans, or any Americans for that matter. There is an inherently devious side to the people of this land, a side that insists that
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