In this book, Jack Greene reinterprets the meaning of American
social development. Synthesizing literature of the previous two
decades on the process of social development and the formation of
American culture, he challenges the central assumptions that have
traditionally been used to analyze colonial British American
history.
Greene argues that the New England declension model traditionally
employed by historians is inappropriate for describing social
change in all the other early modern British colonies. The settler
societies established in Ireland, the Atlantic island colonies of
Bermuda and the Bahamas, the West Indies, the Middle Colonies, and
the Lower South followed instead a pattern first exhibited in
America in the Chesapeake. That pattern involved a process in which
these new societies slowly developed into more elaborate cultural
entities, each of which had its own distinctive features.
Greene also stresses the social and cultural convergence between
New England and the other regions of colonial British America after
1710 and argues that by the eve of the American Revolution
Britain's North American colonies were both more alike and more
like the parent society than ever before. He contends as well that
the salient features of an emerging American culture during these
years are to be found not primarily in New England puritanism but
in widely manifest configurations of sociocultural behavior
exhibited throughout British North America, including New England,
and he emphasized the centrality of slavery to that culture.