Ann Marie Plane is Professor of History at the University of California, Santa Barbara, and is a Training and Supervising Analyst at the Institute of Contemporary Psychoanalysis in Los Angeles. She is coeditor of Dreams, Dreamers, and Visions: The Early Modern Atlantic World, also available from the University of Pennsylvania Press.

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Description
Preface Introduction Chapter 1. English Dream Belief and Practice in the Tudor-Stuart World Chapter 2. Representation of Indigenous Dreaming at Contact and Beyond Chapter 3. Lived Religion and Embedded Emotion in Midcentury Dream Reporting Chapter 4. Dreams and Visions in King Philip's War Chapter 5. Emotion, Embodiment, and Context Chapter 6. Native Dream Reporting as Cultural Resistance Conclusion List of Abbreviations Notes Index Acknowledgments
"With a fresh interpretation of an understudied phenomenon, this book makes important contributions to the history of cultural contact, the history of lived religion in Puritan New England, gender studies, and the nascent field of history of the emotions and interior states of subjectivity." (Susan Juster, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor) "A fine work of scholarship. Plane makes a significant contribution to Native American historiography, offering a uniquely fine-grained assessment of the worldview of Native New Englanders and English settlers, whose lives were not separate but intricately entangled." (Matthew Dennis, University of Oregon)
