* List of Illustrations * Introduction: Reflections on Some Major Themes [Bernard Bailyn] *1. Ecology, Seasonality, and the Transatlantic Slave Trade [Stephen D. Behrendt] *2. Kongo and Dahomey, 1660--1815: African Political Leadership in the Era of the Slave Trade and Its Impact on the Formation of African Identity in Brazil [Linda M. Heywood and John K. Thornton] *3. The Triumphs of Mercury: Connection and Controlin the Emerging Atlantic Economy [David J. Hancock] *4. Inter-Imperial Smuggling in the Americas, 1600--1800 [Willem Klooster] *5. Procurators and the Making of the Jesuits' Atlantic Network [J. Gabriel Martinez-Serna] *6. Dissenting Religious Communication Networks and European Migration, 1660--1710 [Rosalind J. Beiler] *7. Typology in the Atlantic World: Early Modern Readings of Colonization [Jorge Canizares-Esguerra] *8. A Courier between Empires: Hipolito da Costa and the Atlantic World [Neil Safier] *9. Scientific Exchange in the Eighteenth-Century Atlantic World [Londa Schiebinger] *10. Theopolis Americana: The City-State of Boston, the Republic of Letters, and the Protestant International, 1689--1739 [Mark A. Peterson] *11. The Rio de la Plata and Anglo-American Political and Social Models 1810--1827 [Beatriz Davilo] *12. The Atlantic Worlds of David Hume [Emma Rothschild] * Notes * List of Contributors * Index
With their emphasis on networks--economic, ecological, migratory, commercial, religious, intellectual, ideological--the wide-ranging essays in this book invite a host of new and exciting questions in Atlantic history. They reframe the Atlantic, offering new models to explain relationships in several ways: between Europe, Africa, and the Americas; between the political hearts of empires and the territories and subjects they sought to govern; and between empires and states. This volume is a feast for the imagination that will be valuable for both scholars and non-specialists. -- Alison Games, Georgetown University An impressive volume, ranging from smuggling to science, from ecology to the economy, from Benin to Buenos Aires, from Pietists to Puritans, and from Hipolito da Costa to Hume, reveals the vigor and freshness of Atlantic history. The magisterial introduction reveals the relationship between the latent and the manifest, the connection between subterranean forces and surface outlines. Overall, the general and particular combine superbly. -- Philip D. Morgan, Johns Hopkins University
Bernard Bailyn is Adams University Professor, Emeritus, and Director of the International Seminar on the History of the Atlantic World, Harvard University. He is the author of numerous books, including The Ideological Origins of the American Revolution (Pulitzer and Bancroft Prizes) and The Ordeal of Thomas Hutchinson (National Book Award), both published by Harvard. Patricia L. Denault is the former Administrative Director of the International Seminar on the History of the Atlantic World and of the Charles Warren Center for Studies in American History at Harvard University Londa Schiebinger is John L. Hinds Professor of History of Science and Barbara D. Finberg Director of the Clayman Institute for Gender Research, Stanford University. Emma Rothschild is a Fellow of King's College, Cambridge, and Director of the Center for History and Economics, King's College.
Engagingly written, the book demonstrates the shifting significance of the Atlantic World as well as its multiple significations in reality and over time. The Atlantic has made it possible to create a hybrid world, where what started as local ideas ultimately became globalized. Globalized localisms became globalized universalisms, enabling millions of people to subscribe to the same religions, read the same books and consume the same food. This book has enabled us to comprehend this mental and physical universe of the Atlantic World with enormous significance. -- Toyin Falola H-Soz-u-kult Reviews 20100924 This is a most illuminating body of work for anyone interested in the latest research on the Atlantic world. -- Xabier Lamikiz International Journal of Maritime History 20100601 Adds considerably to our understanding of Atlantic (and other) histories. -- Peter Coclanis American Historical Review 20100401
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