WHEN THE TRAGIC HERO SURVIVES;

OR, THE CASE OF PONTIAC IN ROBERT ROGERS’S PONTEACH (1766)

Authors

  • LUDWIG Sämi UHA Mulhouse

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.12795/REN.2023.i27.9

Keywords:

Pontiac, Robert Rogers, indian uprising of 1763

Abstract

ABSTRACT: PONTEACH: or, The Savages of America: A Tragedy (1766) is the first substantially interesting play ever written by an English-speaking American. Major Robert Rogers probably wrote it together with his secretary Nathaniel Potter (a defrocked Massachusetts minister), while they stayed in London in 1765. The printed version did not meet London expectations, and the play was never performed. My aim in this analysis is to show how the convention-breaking survival of the tragic hero Ponteach inside the play prepares a future cooperation outside the play by Rogers himself with the historical Ottawa chief Pontiac, whom he knew personally and on whom the “savage” hero Ponteach is modelled. Rogers intended to present himself to the English colonial rulers in London as an expert on the American West and to advance his own chances of profiting from the future Indian trade in the First British Empire’s growing American West.

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References

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--- vol. 38, 1768, p. 348.

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---. A CONCISE ACCOUNT OF NORTH AMERICA: CONTAINING A Description of the several BRITISH COLONIES on that Continent, including the Islands of NEWFOUNDLAND, CAPE BRETON, &c. AS TO Their Situation, Extent, Climate, Soil, Produce, Rise, Government, Region, Present Boundaries, and the Number of Inhabitants supposed to be in each, ALSO OF The Interior, or Westerly Parts of the Country, upon the Rivers ST. LAURENCE, the MISSISSIPPI, CHRISTINO, and the Great Lakes. To which is subjoined, An Account of the several Nations and Tribes of Indians residing in those Parts, as to their Customs, manners, Government, Numbers, &c. Containing many Useful and Entertaining Facts, never before treated of. J. Millan, 1765.

--- (Königl. Grossbritannischen Major). Eine kurze Nachricht von Nord-Amerika. Sammlung neuer Reisebeschreibungen aus fremden Sprachen besonders der Englischen in die Teutsche übersetzt, und mit Anmerkungen erläutert von Johann Tobias Köhler. Erster Band, erste Abteilung. Johann Christian Dietrich, 1767.

---. “First Proposal [to find the Northwest Passage]. A Proposal by Robert Rogers Esq. formerly Major Commandt. of His Majesty’s Rangers in North America, founded on his Observations and Experience, during the Space of Eight Years in the least known parts of that great Continent. Humbly Submitted to the Wisdom of the Kings most Excellent Majesty and his Ministers.” August 1765. Rpt. Elliott 101-5.

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---. JOURNALS OF Major Robert Rogers: Containing an Account of several Excursions he made under the Generals who commanded upon the Continent of NORTH AMERICA, during the late War. From which may be collected The most material Circumstances of every Campaign upon that Continent, from the Commencement to the Conclusion of the War. J. Millan, 1765.

---. Letter to his wife Betsy. “on Board the Ship,” 27th [?] 1765. Clements Library holdings.

---. PONTEACH: OR THE Savages of America. A TRAGEDY. J. Millan, 1766.

---. Ponteach, or the Savages of America; A Tragedy. 1766. Edited by Tiffany Potter. U of Toronto P, 2010.

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---. “The 1767 Maps of Robert Rogers and Jonathan Carver: A Proposal for the Establishment of the Colony of Michilimackinac.” Michigan Historical Review vol. 30, no. 2, Fall 2004, pp. 35-75.

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Published

2023-12-20

How to Cite

Sämi, L. “WHEN THE TRAGIC HERO SURVIVES; : OR, THE CASE OF PONTIAC IN ROBERT ROGERS’S PONTEACH (1766)”. Revista De Estudios Norteamericanos, vol. 27, Dec. 2023, doi:10.12795/REN.2023.i27.9.

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Section

Special Section: Game Over
Received 2023-08-03
Accepted 2023-12-06
Published 2023-12-20
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