Colonial America presented a new world of natural curiosities for
settlers as well as the London-based scientific community. In
American Curiosity, Susan Scott Parrish examines how various
peoples in the British colonies understood and represented the
natural world around them from the late sixteenth century through
the eighteenth. Parrish shows how scientific knowledge about
America, rather than flowing strictly from metropole to colony,
emerged from a horizontal exchange of information across the
Atlantic.
Delving into an understudied archive of letters, Parrish uncovers
early descriptions of American natural phenomena as well as clues
to how people in the colonies construed their own identities
through the natural world. Although hierarchies of gender, class,
institutional learning, place of birth or residence, and race
persisted within the natural history community, the contributions
of any participant were considered valuable as long as they
supplied novel data or specimens from the American side of the
Atlantic. Thus Anglo-American nonelites, women, Indians, and
enslaved Africans all played crucial roles in gathering and
relaying new information to Europe.
Recognizing a significant tradition of nature writing and
representation in North America well before the Transcendentalists,
American Curiosity also enlarges our notions of the
scientific Enlightenment by looking beyond European centers to find
a socially inclusive American base to a true transatlantic
expansion of knowledge.