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| Book Review | The Journal of American History, 95.2 | The History Cooperative
95.2  
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September, 2008
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Book Review



The Pilgrim and the Bee: Reading Rituals and Book Culture in Early New England. By Matthew P. Brown. (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2007. xvi, 265 pp. $65.00, ISBN 978-0-8122-4015-3.)

In The Pilgrim and the Bee, Matthew P. Brown presents a "phenomenology of the book," illuminating the interactions of readers and books (p. xi). Examining a range of printed texts and manuscripts through the lenses of book history, textual analysis, and performance studies, he crafts a "reader-based literary history" of lived religion in colonial America. Brown's literary history attends to books and manuscripts as material objects to be held, read, annotated, and even buried. . . .

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