The Algerine Spy in Pennsylvania

An Important Book in America’s Early Encounter with the Arab World 

“A pungent satire on American affairs.” —Samuel Eliot Morison

In 1787, while American sailors languished in a Barbary prison, delegates debated the Constitution in Philadelphia. Despite America’s desire to respond to the crisis, without a central government, the new republic had no means to create a naval force. Enter an anonymously published book, The Algerine Spy in Pennsylvania: or, Letters Written by a Native of Algiers on the Affairs of the United States in America, which began circulating among the delegates. Consisting of a series of letters ostensibly written by an Algerian agent “Mehmet” back to his leader, the spy predicted that the former colonies would never be able to resolve their differences and be “ruined by disunion.” The book created a sensation and it helped tip the balance for those in favor of adopting the new Constitution. Following the Constitution’s final ratification in 1789, the United States created a navy and began asserting its power overseas. With its commentary about men and women, business and pleasure, and historical and religious comparisons between nations, The Algerine Spy in Pennsylvania provides both a contemporary snapshot of early American life and the political ideas of the period. Never before reprinted, and recently rated one of the five best works in the history of America’s encounter with the Arab world, this new edition is edited by historian Timothy Marr, who reconsiders the importance of this early work in the political and literary history of the United States.

1101184594
The Algerine Spy in Pennsylvania

An Important Book in America’s Early Encounter with the Arab World 

“A pungent satire on American affairs.” —Samuel Eliot Morison

In 1787, while American sailors languished in a Barbary prison, delegates debated the Constitution in Philadelphia. Despite America’s desire to respond to the crisis, without a central government, the new republic had no means to create a naval force. Enter an anonymously published book, The Algerine Spy in Pennsylvania: or, Letters Written by a Native of Algiers on the Affairs of the United States in America, which began circulating among the delegates. Consisting of a series of letters ostensibly written by an Algerian agent “Mehmet” back to his leader, the spy predicted that the former colonies would never be able to resolve their differences and be “ruined by disunion.” The book created a sensation and it helped tip the balance for those in favor of adopting the new Constitution. Following the Constitution’s final ratification in 1789, the United States created a navy and began asserting its power overseas. With its commentary about men and women, business and pleasure, and historical and religious comparisons between nations, The Algerine Spy in Pennsylvania provides both a contemporary snapshot of early American life and the political ideas of the period. Never before reprinted, and recently rated one of the five best works in the history of America’s encounter with the Arab world, this new edition is edited by historian Timothy Marr, who reconsiders the importance of this early work in the political and literary history of the United States.

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The Algerine Spy in Pennsylvania

The Algerine Spy in Pennsylvania

The Algerine Spy in Pennsylvania

The Algerine Spy in Pennsylvania

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Overview

An Important Book in America’s Early Encounter with the Arab World 

“A pungent satire on American affairs.” —Samuel Eliot Morison

In 1787, while American sailors languished in a Barbary prison, delegates debated the Constitution in Philadelphia. Despite America’s desire to respond to the crisis, without a central government, the new republic had no means to create a naval force. Enter an anonymously published book, The Algerine Spy in Pennsylvania: or, Letters Written by a Native of Algiers on the Affairs of the United States in America, which began circulating among the delegates. Consisting of a series of letters ostensibly written by an Algerian agent “Mehmet” back to his leader, the spy predicted that the former colonies would never be able to resolve their differences and be “ruined by disunion.” The book created a sensation and it helped tip the balance for those in favor of adopting the new Constitution. Following the Constitution’s final ratification in 1789, the United States created a navy and began asserting its power overseas. With its commentary about men and women, business and pleasure, and historical and religious comparisons between nations, The Algerine Spy in Pennsylvania provides both a contemporary snapshot of early American life and the political ideas of the period. Never before reprinted, and recently rated one of the five best works in the history of America’s encounter with the Arab world, this new edition is edited by historian Timothy Marr, who reconsiders the importance of this early work in the political and literary history of the United States.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781594166594
Publisher: Westholme Publishing
Publication date: 07/02/2020
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 166
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

PETER MARKOE (1752?–1792), a poet and playwright, immigrated to Philadelphia from the West Indies in 1783.

TIMOTHY MARR is associate professor of American studies at the University of North Carolina and author of The Cultural Roots of American Islamicism.

Table of Contents


Introduction     vii
Letter from the Publisher     1
Letter from the Translator     5
Mehemet to Solyman from Gibraltar     7
Mehemet to Solyman from Gibraltar     12
Mehemet to Solyman from Gibraltar     17
Mehemet to Solyman from Gibraltar     22
Mehemet to Solyman from Gibraltar     27
Mehemet to Solyman from Gibraltar     32
Mehemet to Solyman from Gibraltar     37
Mehemet to Solyman from Lisbon     47
Mehemet to Solyman from Lisbon     52
Mehemet to Solyman from Lisbon     57
Mehemet to Solyman from Philadelphia     62
Mehemet to Solyman from Philadelphia     68
Mehemet to Solyman from Philadelphia     73
Mehemet to Solyman from Philadelphia     76
Mehemet to Fatima from Philadelphia     82
Mehemet to - from Philadelphia     87
Mehemet to - from Philadelphia     91
Mehemet to - from Philadelphia     97
Mehemet to - from Philadelphia     103
Mehemet to - from Philadelphia     108
Solomon Mendez to Mehemet from Gibraltar     112
Solomon to Mehemet from Algiers     115
Alvarez to Solyman fromMalaga     119
Mehemet to Solomon Mendez from Philadelphia     122
Index     127
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