id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_z6eillxbb5gtdad2gnzurtylje Brian Sandberg Beyond Encounters: Religion, Ethnicity, and Violence in the Early Modern Atlantic World, 1492-1700 2006 26 .pdf application/pdf 11060 705 48 Beyond Encounters: Religion, Ethnicity, and Violence in the Early Modern Atlantic World, 1492-1700 studies of religious and ethnic violence in a common setting: the borderlands and colonial frontiers within this Atlantic world. along the Atlantic coast, but colonial chronicles and captivity narratives provide rich descriptions of prolonged interactions between Europeans, Native Americans, and Africans in the Atlantic world.12 These all of these texts are Eurocentric accounts that rely on linguistic interpretation for their depictions of Native American and African cultures, making it difficult, if not impossible, to access indigenous peoples' voices.13 The sixteenthand seventeenth-century audiences for by treating early modern Spanish, Native American, and English practitioners of violence as key historical actors operating through overlapping subject positions. 37 Donald Harman Akenson, If the Irish Ran the World: Montserrat, 1630–1730 (Montreal and Kingston: McGill-Queen's University Press, 1997); also, Jane Ohlmeyer, "Seventeenth-Century Ireland and the New British and Atlantic Histories," American Historical ./cache/work_z6eillxbb5gtdad2gnzurtylje.pdf ./txt/work_z6eillxbb5gtdad2gnzurtylje.txt