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Article # : 12303 

Section : BOOK WORLD
Issue Date : 1 / 1987  4,596 Words
Author : Edward S. Shapiro
Edward S. Shapiro is professor of history at Seton Hall University and author of The Letters of Sidney Hook: Democracy, Communism, and the Cold War (1995).

       THE PEOPLING OF BRITISH NORTH AMERICA
       An Introduction
       Bernard Bailyn
       New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1986
       177 pp., $ 16.95
       
       VOYAGERS TO THE WEST
       A Passage in the Peopling of America on the Eve of the Revolution
       Bernard Bailyn
       New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1986
       704 pp., $ 30.00
       
        Bernard Bailyn's new works provide a historical background for the contemporary and at times bitter debate over immigration policy and the status of the English language, including such dire predictions as John Hutchinson's (THE WORLD & I, No.7, p. 628) that the United States faces a potential tide of Hispanic immigration which is "unlikely to be popular or peaceful, or for the better for either the United States or Western civilization, and could be ravaging to both." In the hands of Bailyn, "immigration history" has taken on new meaning and relevance. Having previously won the Pulitzer Prize, the Bancroft Prize, and the National Book Award for History, he will undoubtedly receive further honors for Voyagers to the West.
       
        Bailyn's concerns is with "the peopling of British North America," the transatlantic transfer of people and culture from Europe to North America, and the factors that pushed emigrants out to Europe and attracted them to America. This "westward transatlantic movement," he writes, "is one of the greatest events in recorded history." It is a grand theme, perhaps the grandest in American history, encompassing both immigration to America and the westward movement of population into the American back country. In reading Bailyn, one is reminded of the opening sentence of Oscar Handlin's Pulitzer Prize winning book The Uprooted. "Once I thought to write a history of the immigrants in America. Then I discovered that the immigrants were American history."
       
        The peopling of British North America was an aspect of the dynamic processes modernizing European medieval society as well as part of the greatest population movement in early modern history. It transformed a primitive and exotic outback into an outpost of western civilization. Bailyn views this peopling process in the broadest possible context as an extension of domestic mobility within Great Britain and Germany. "The North
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