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Atlantic World, The: Essays on Slavery, Migration and Imagination
Wim Klooster, Clark University
Alfred Padula, University of Southern Maine

ISBN-10: 0131839152
ISBN-13: 9780131839151

Publisher: Prentice Hall
Copyright: 2005
Format: Paper; 224 pp
Published: 03/18/2004

Suggested retail price: $46.67
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For undergraduate/graduate courses in Colonial American History.

This original text brings together four pairs of essays that examine the themes of slavery, migration, and imagination in the Atlantic World from 1500-1800. Offering all the advantages of an Atlantic approach, it explores major historical topics and the manifold connections between the Old World and the New in the early modern period. With essays by such authoritative scholars as David Eltis, Paul Lovejoy, Benjamin Schmidt, and Jorge Cañizares-Esguerra, The Atlantic World is an important new book for the colonial American history course.

  • Comparative approach–To studying the diverse Atlantic world.
    • Allows students to examine similarities and differences within and between empires and continents.

  • Wide range of topics.
    • Guides students and instructors to the many possibilities Atlantic history offers.

  • Introduction.
    • Provides an overview of the Atlantic world that contextualizes the essays which follow.

  • Four-part organization–Covers the role of specific port cities in Atlantic history; European migration; the African dimension; and ways in which the Atlantic world has been imagined.
    • Helps students gain an understanding of the continuous flow of people, commodities, and ideas present in the Atlantic basin in the wake of Columbus's voyages.

  • Index–Unusual for an edited anthology and highly useful.

INTRODUCTION.

The Rise and Transformation of the Atlantic World, Wim Klooster.

PERSPECTIVES.

Life on the Margins: Boston's Anxieties of Influence in the Atlantic World, Mark A. Peterson.

Lisbon as a Strategic Haven in the Atlantic World, Timothy Walker.

EUROPEAN MIGRATION.

Adventurers Across the Atlantic: English Migration to the New World, 1580-1780, Meaghan N. Duff.

Searching for Prosperity: German Migration to the British American Colonies, 1680-1780, Rosalind J. Beiler.

THE AFRICAN DIMENSION.

Identity and Migration: The Atlantic in Comparative Perspective, David Eltis.

Trans-Atlantic Transformations: The Origins and Identity of Africans in the Americas, Paul E. Lovejoy.

IMAGINATION.

Whose Centers and Peripheries? Eighteenth-Century Intellectual History in Atlantic Perspective, Jorge Cañizares-Esguerra.

The Purpose of Pirates, or Assimilating New Worlds in the Renaissance, Benjamin Schmidt.

"This exciting volume delivers even more than it promises. It treats collectively of all European groups who contributed to the shaping of the Atlantic World that had emerged by the eighteenth century, and it demonstrates how their endeavors were modified and complemented by significant contributions from Native Americans and Africans who, in so many respects, were the principal victims of the political and economic systems that emerged. The Introduction is, in itself, a compelling overview." — Nicholas Canny, National University of Ireland, Galway

"This volume, effectively framed by Wim Klooster's thorough introduction, presents an outstanding collection of articles by leading scholars. The authors bring to bear a wealth of scholarly expertise and intellectual sophistication as they address diverse aspects of the experiences, objectives and perceptions of the people who shaped the Atlantic world. The articles vividly illustrate how the opportunities afforded by expansion across the Atlantic shaped the actions and aspirations of Europeans and Africans through a complex of forces: competition for advantage and survival, coercion, individual and collective ambition, and the quest for intellectual comprehension of the very world the participants were in the process of forging." — Ida Altman, University Research Professor, University of New Orleans

"This volume is admirable in its conceptualization and promises to provide students with important and thought-provoking essays by distinguished historians on a number of topics fundamental to the study of Atlantic history. It will introduce undergraduates who are new to the study of history to exemplary scholarship while enabling more advanced students to use these essays as starting points for further study. It is exciting to see essays with such a wide range in topics by such thoughtful historians gathered together in a single volume." — Alison Games, Georgetown University

"The work of these scholars is quite remarkable and I am confident The Atlantic World will be well received by both students and teachers." — John Thornton, Boston University

Wim Klooster is an Assistant Professor of History at Clark University. He has held fellowships at the John Carter Brown Library, the Charles Warren Center at Harvard University, and the National University of Ireland. His publications include The etch in the Americas, 1600-1800 (Providence, RI, 1997) and Illicit Riches. Dutch Trade in the Caribbean, 1648-1795 (Leiden, 1998). The working title of his current book project is The Dutch in the Atlantic World: Expansion and Contraction in the Golden Age.

Alfred Padula began his professional career as a servitor of the Cold War, first in Naval Intelligence and thereafter in the State Department. His work as Cuban analyst precipitated a lifelong interest in that country. Receipt of a Ford Foundation Fellowship for the Study of Revolutions led him into academia, specifically at the University of Southern Maine (USM) in the seaport city of Portland, where he could also indulge his interests as a small boat sailor. At USM, Professor Padula taught Latin American history, and produced numerous papers, reviews, and articles on Cuban issues, climaxing in a volume on women and the Cuban revolution: Sex and Revolution. Women in Socialist Cuba (Oxford, 1995).

This important new contribution to the study of Atlantic history brings together eight original essays by such leading scholars as Jorge Canizares-Esguerra, Paul Lovejoy, David Eltis, and Benjamin Schmidt on the many connections between the Old World and the New World in the early modern period. With an introduction by Wim Klooster, the four sets of paired essays examine the role of specific port cities in Atlantic history, aspects of European migration, the African dimension, and ways in which the Atlantic world has been imagined. Numerous maps and illustrations further enrich this vital new contribution to undergraduate and graduate courses of study in Atlantic history.

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