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Atlantic history

Atlantic history is a specialty field in history that studies the Atlantic World in the early modern period. The Atlantic World was created by the contact between Europeans and the Americas, and Atlantic History is the study of that world.[1] It is premised on the idea that, following the rise of sustained European contact with the New World in the 16th century, the continents that bordered the Atlantic Ocean—the Americas, Europe, and Africa—constituted a regional system or common sphere of economic and cultural exchange that can be studied as a totality.[2]

The Atlantic Ocean which gives its name to the so-called Atlantic World of the early modern period

Its theme is the complex interaction between Europe (especially Great Britain, France, Spain, and Portugal) and their colonies in the Americas. It encompasses a wide range of demographic, social, economic, political, legal, military, intellectual and religious topics treated in comparative fashion by looking at both sides of the Atlantic. Religious revivals in Britain and Germany are studies, as well as the First Great Awakening in the Thirteen Colonies. Emigration, race and slavery are also important topics.[3]

Researchers of Atlantic history typically focus on the interconnections and exchanges between these regions and the civilizations they harbored. In particular, they argue that the boundaries between nation states which traditionally determined the limits of older historiography should not be applied to such transnational phenomena as slavery, colonialism, missionary activity and economic expansion. Environmental history and the study of historical demography also play an important role, as many key questions in the field revolve around the ecological and epidemiological impact of the Columbian exchange.

Robert R. Palmer, an American historian of the French Revolution, pioneered the concept in the 1950s with a wide-ranging comparative history of how numerous nations experienced what he called The Age of the Democratic Revolution: A Political History of Europe and America, 1760–1800 (1959 and 1964).[4] In this monumental work, he did not compare the French and the American Revolutions as successful models against other types of revolutions. Indeed, he developed a wider understanding of the changes that were led by revolutionary processes across the Western civilization. Such work followed in the footsteps of C. L. R. James who, in the 1930s, connected Caribbean with European history. Since the 1980s Atlantic history has emerged as an increasingly popular alternative to the older discipline of imperial history, although it could be argued that the field is simply a refinement and reorientation of traditional historiography dealing with the interaction between early modern Europeans and native peoples in the Atlantic sphere. The organization of Atlantic History as a recognized area of historiography began in the 1980s under the impetus of American historians Bernard Bailyn of Harvard University and Jack P. Greene of Johns Hopkins University, among others. The post-World War II integration of the European Union and the continuing importance of NATO played an indirect role in stimulating interest throughout the 1990s.[3]

Development of the field edit

Bernard Bailyn's Seminar on the History of the Atlantic World promoted social and demographic studies, and especially regarding demographic flows of population into colonial America. As a leading advocate of the history of the Atlantic world, Bailyn has since 1995 organized an annual international seminar at Harvard designed to promote scholarship in this field.[5] Professor Bailyn was the promoter of "The International Seminar on the History of the Atlantic World, 1500-1825" at Harvard University. This was one of the first, and most important, academic initiatives to launch the Atlantic perspective. From 1995-2010 the Atlantic History Seminar sponsored an annual meeting of young historians engaged in creative research on aspects of Atlantic History. In all, 366 young historians came through the Seminar program, 202 from universities in the US and 164 from universities abroad. Its purpose was to advance the scholarship of young historians of many nations interested in the common, comparative, and interactive aspects of the lives of the peoples in the lands that are part of the Atlantic basin, mainly in the early modern period in order to contribute to the study of this transnational historical subject.[6]

Bailyn's Atlantic History: Concepts and Contours (2005) explores the borders and contents of the emerging field, which emphasizes cosmopolitan and multicultural elements that have tended to be neglected or considered in isolation by traditional historiography dealing with the Americas. Bailyn's reflections stem in part from his seminar at Harvard since the mid-1980s.

Other important scholars are Jack Greene, who directed a program at Johns Hopkins in Atlantic History from 1972 to 1992 that has now expanded to global concerns. Karen Ordahl Kupperman established the Atlantic Workshop at New York University in 1997.

Other scholars in the field include Ida Altman, Kenneth J. Andrien, David Armitage, Trevor Burnard, Jorge Canizares-Esguerra, Nicholas Canny, Philip D. Curtin, Laurent Dubois, J.H. Elliott, David Eltis, Alison Games, Eliga H. Gould, Anthony Grafton, Joseph C. Miller, Philip D. Morgan, Anthony Pagden, Jennifer L. Anderson, John Thornton, James D. Tracy, Carla G. Pestana, Isaac Land, Richard S. Dunn, and Ned C. Landsman.

Perspectives edit

Alison Games (2006) explores the convergence of the multiple strands of scholarly interest that have generated the new field of Atlantic history, which takes as its geographic unit of analysis the Atlantic Ocean and the four continents that surround it. She argues Atlantic history is best approached as a slice of world history. The Atlantic, moreover, is a region that has logic as a unit of historical analysis only within a limited chronology. An Atlantic perspective can help historians understand changes within the region that a more limited geographic framework might obscure. Attempts to write a Braudelian[7] Atlantic history, one that includes and connects the entire region, remain elusive, driven in part by methodological impediments, by the real disjunction that characterized the Atlantic's historical and geographic components, by the disciplinary divisions that discourage historians from speaking to and writing for each other, and by the challenge of finding a vantage point that is not rooted in any single place.[8]

Colonial studies edit

One impetus for Atlantic studies began in the 1960s with the historians of slavery who started tracking the routes of the transatlantic slave trade.[9] A second source came from historians who studied the colonial history of the United States. Many were trained in early modern European history and were familiar with the historiography of the British Empire, which had been introduced a century before by George Louis Beer and Charles McLean Andrews. Historians studying colonialism have long been open to interdisciplinary perspectives, such as comparative approaches. In addition there was a frustration involved in writing about very few people in a small remote colony. Atlantic history opens the horizon to large forces at work over great distances.[8]

Criticism edit

Some critics have complained that Atlantic history is little more than imperial history under another name.[10] It has been argued that it is too expansive in claiming to subsume both of the American continents, Africa, and Europe, without seriously engaging with them.[11] According to Caroline Dodds Pennock, indigenous people are often seen as static recipients of transatlantic encounter, despite the fact that thousands of Native Americans crossed the ocean during the sixteenth century, some by choice.[12]

Canadian scholar Ian K. Steele argued that Atlantic history will tend to draw students interested in exploring their country's historian beyond national myths, while offering historical support for such 21st century policies as the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), the Organization of American States (OAS), the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), the New Europe, Christendom, and even the United Nations (UN). He concludes, "The early modern Atlantic can even be read as a natural antechamber for American‐led globalization of capitalism and serve as an historical challenge to the coalescing New Europe. No wonder that the academic reception of the new Atlantic history has been enthusiastic in the United States, and less so in Britain, France, Spain, and Portugal, where histories of national Atlantic empires continue to thrive."[13]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Bailyn, Bernard. 2005. Atlantic History : Concept and Contours. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press, 2005
  2. ^ Karen Ordahl Kupperman, The Atlantic in World History (2012)
  3. ^ a b O'Reilly, (2004)
  4. ^ Edoardo Tortarolo, "Eighteenth-century Atlantic history old and new," History of European Ideas (2008) 34#4, pp. 369–374.
  5. ^ See October 24, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ "About the Seminar". atlantic.fas.harvard.edu. Retrieved July 13, 2021.
  7. ^ A reference to the great classic, The Mediterranean and the Mediterranean World in the Age of Philip II (2 vol 1949) by Fernand Braudel (1902–1985).
  8. ^ a b Games (2006)
  9. ^ Philip Curtin (1998)
  10. ^ Philip D. Morgan, ed. (2009). Atlantic History: A Critical Appraisal. Oxford UP. p. 35. ISBN 9780195320336.
  11. ^ Nancy L. Rhoden (2014). English Atlantics Revisited: Essays Honouring Ian K. Steele. McGill-Queen's Press. p. 19. ISBN 9780773560406.
  12. ^ Dodds Pennock, Caroline (June 29, 2020). "Aztecs Abroad? Uncovering the Early Indigenous Atlantic". The American Historical Review. from the original on July 27, 2020. Retrieved December 30, 2020.
  13. ^ Ian K. Steele, "Featured Reviews" in American Historical Review (Dec. 2009) v.114#5, pp. 1405–7.[1]

Bibliography edit

  • Altman, Ida. Emigrants and Society: Extremadura and Spanish America in the Sixteenth Century. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1989.
  • Altman, Ida. Transatlantic Ties in the Spanish Empire: Brihuega, Spain, and Puebla, Mexico, 1560–1620. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2000.
  • Altman, Ida and James J. Horn, eds. "To Make America": European Emigration in the Early Modern Period. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1991.
  • Armitage, David, and Michael J. Braddick, eds., The British Atlantic World, 1500–1800 (2002); see especially the lead article by Armitage, "Three Concepts of Atlantic History."
  • Anderson, Jennifer L. Mahogany: The Costs of Luxury in Early America (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2012).
  • Bailyn, Bernard. Voyagers to the West: a passage in the peopling of America on the eve of the Revolution Knopf 1986, winner of the Pulitzer Prize in History
  • Bailyn, Bernard. Atlantic History: Concept and Contours (2005). ISBN 978-0-674-01688-0.
  • Bodle, Wayne. "Atlantic History Is the New 'New Social History.'" William and Mary Quarterly 2007 64(1): 203–220. ISSN 0043-5597
  • Canny, Nicholas, and Philip Morgan, eds., The Oxford Handbook of the Atlantic World: 1450–1850 (2011)
  • Curtin, Philip D. The Rise and Fall of the Plantation Complex: Essays in Atlantic History (1998) ISBN 0521629438
  • Egerton, Douglas R. et al. The Atlantic World: A History, 1400–1888 (2007), college textbook; 530 pp.
  • Elliott, John H. Empires of the Atlantic World: Britain and Spain in America 1492–1830 (2007), 608 pp., ISBN 030012399X.
  • Eltis, David. The Rise of African Slavery in the Americas (2000).
  • Fernlund, Kevin Jon. "American Exceptionalism or Atlantic Unity? Frederick Jackson Turner and the Enduring Problem of American Historiography." New Mexico Historical Review 2014 89 (3): 359–399.
  • Klooster, Wim. The Dutch Moment: War, Trade, and Settlement in the Seventeenth-Century Atlantic World (2016)
  • Klooster, Wim, and Gert Oostindie. Realm between Empires: The Second Dutch Atlantic, 1680-1815 (Cornell UP, 2018) 348 pp. pnline review
  • Landsman, Ned C. Scotland and Its First American Colony, 1683–1765 (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1985)
  • Landsman, Ned C. Crossroads of Empire: The Middle Colonies in British North America (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2010).
  • Games, Alison. "Atlantic History: Definitions, Challenges, and Opportunities." American Historical Review 2006 111(3): 741–757. doi:10.1086/ahr.111.3.741
  • Games, Alison and Adam Rothman, eds. Major Problems in Atlantic History: Documents and Essays (2007), 544 pp.; primary and secondary sources
  • Gerbner, Katharine. "Theorizing Conversion: Christianity, Colonization, and Consciousness in the Early Modern Atlantic World." History Compass (2015) 13#3, pp. 134–147.
  • Godechot, Jacques.Histoire de l'Atlantique. Paris, Bordas, 1947.
  • Gould, Eliga H. and Peter S. Onuf, eds. Empire and Nation: The American Revolution in the Atlantic World. Johns Hopkins University Press, 2005. 391 pages. excerpt and text search
  • Gould, Eliga H. "Entangled Atlantic Histories: A Response from the Anglo-American Periphery," The American Historical Review, 112:1415–1422, December 2007 doi:10.1086/ahr.112.5.1415
  • Greene, Jack P. and Philip D. Morgan, eds. Atlantic History: A Critical Appraisal (2009) 371 pp., major historiographical review
  • Hancock, David. Citizens of the World: London Merchants and the Integration of the British Atlantic Community, 1735–1785 (1995)
  • Land, Isaac. "Tidal Waves: the New Coastal History:" Journal of Social History 2007 40(3): 731–743. ISSN 0022-4529
  • Mancke, Elizabeth, and Carole Shammas, eds. The Creation of the British Atlantic World. (2005). 408 pages. ISBN 0801880394.
  • Miller, Joseph C., ed. The Princeton Companion to Atlantic History (2014) ASIN B00NRB9QVI
  • Nagl, Dominik. No Part of the Mother Country, but Distinct Dominions – Law, State Formation and Governance in England, Massachusetts und South Carolina, 1630–1769 (2013).
  • Olwell, Robert, and Alan Tully, eds. Cultures and Identities in Colonial British America. (2006). 394 pages.
  • O'Reilly, William. "Genealogies of Atlantic History," Atlantic Studies 1 (2004): 66–84.
  • Plank, Geoffrey. Atlantic Wars: From the Fifteenth Century to the Age of Revolution. (Oxford University Press, 2020}.
  • Polasky, Janet L. Revolutions without Borders (Yale UP, 2015). 392 pp. online review
  • Rediker, Marcus. Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea: Merchant Seamen, Pirates, and the Anglo- American Maritime World, 1700–1750. (1987).
  • Skeehan, Danielle C. The Fabric of Empire: Material and Literary Cultures of the Global Atlantic, 1650–1850 (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2020).
  • Smith, Joshua M. “Toward a Taxonomy of Maritime Historians,” International Journal of Maritime History XXV: 2 (December, 2013), 1–16.
  • Steele, Ian K. "Bernard Bailyn's American Atlantic." History and Theory 2007 46(1): 48–58. ISSN 0018-2656
  • Thornton, John. Africa and Africans in the Making of the Atlantic World, 1400–1800 (2nd ed., 1998)
  • Wilson, Kathleen, ed. A New Imperial History: Culture, Identity and Modernity in Britain and the Empire (2004). 385 pp.
  • Wilson, Kathleen, The Island Race: Englishness, Empire, and Gender in the. Eighteenth Century. London and New York: Routledge, 2003.

External links edit

  • H-Atlantic, daily email discussions on related scholarly topics; includes book reviews and announcements
  • , annotated bibliography prepared by scholars
  • International Seminar on the History of the Atlantic World, 1500–1825
  • 2003 announcement of Atlantic Studies: Atlantic Studies: Literary, Cultural and Historical Perspectives, from Essex University in UK

atlantic, history, geological, history, atlantic, ocean, opening, north, atlantic, ocean, specialty, field, history, that, studies, atlantic, world, early, modern, period, atlantic, world, created, contact, between, europeans, americas, atlantic, history, stud. For the geological history of the Atlantic Ocean see Opening of the North Atlantic Ocean Atlantic history is a specialty field in history that studies the Atlantic World in the early modern period The Atlantic World was created by the contact between Europeans and the Americas and Atlantic History is the study of that world 1 It is premised on the idea that following the rise of sustained European contact with the New World in the 16th century the continents that bordered the Atlantic Ocean the Americas Europe and Africa constituted a regional system or common sphere of economic and cultural exchange that can be studied as a totality 2 The Atlantic Ocean which gives its name to the so called Atlantic World of the early modern periodIts theme is the complex interaction between Europe especially Great Britain France Spain and Portugal and their colonies in the Americas It encompasses a wide range of demographic social economic political legal military intellectual and religious topics treated in comparative fashion by looking at both sides of the Atlantic Religious revivals in Britain and Germany are studies as well as the First Great Awakening in the Thirteen Colonies Emigration race and slavery are also important topics 3 Researchers of Atlantic history typically focus on the interconnections and exchanges between these regions and the civilizations they harbored In particular they argue that the boundaries between nation states which traditionally determined the limits of older historiography should not be applied to such transnational phenomena as slavery colonialism missionary activity and economic expansion Environmental history and the study of historical demography also play an important role as many key questions in the field revolve around the ecological and epidemiological impact of the Columbian exchange Robert R Palmer an American historian of the French Revolution pioneered the concept in the 1950s with a wide ranging comparative history of how numerous nations experienced what he called The Age of the Democratic Revolution A Political History of Europe and America 1760 1800 1959 and 1964 4 In this monumental work he did not compare the French and the American Revolutions as successful models against other types of revolutions Indeed he developed a wider understanding of the changes that were led by revolutionary processes across the Western civilization Such work followed in the footsteps of C L R James who in the 1930s connected Caribbean with European history Since the 1980s Atlantic history has emerged as an increasingly popular alternative to the older discipline of imperial history although it could be argued that the field is simply a refinement and reorientation of traditional historiography dealing with the interaction between early modern Europeans and native peoples in the Atlantic sphere The organization of Atlantic History as a recognized area of historiography began in the 1980s under the impetus of American historians Bernard Bailyn of Harvard University and Jack P Greene of Johns Hopkins University among others The post World War II integration of the European Union and the continuing importance of NATO played an indirect role in stimulating interest throughout the 1990s 3 Contents 1 Development of the field 2 Perspectives 3 Colonial studies 4 Criticism 5 See also 6 Notes 7 Bibliography 8 External linksDevelopment of the field editBernard Bailyn s Seminar on the History of the Atlantic World promoted social and demographic studies and especially regarding demographic flows of population into colonial America As a leading advocate of the history of the Atlantic world Bailyn has since 1995 organized an annual international seminar at Harvard designed to promote scholarship in this field 5 Professor Bailyn was the promoter of The International Seminar on the History of the Atlantic World 1500 1825 at Harvard University This was one of the first and most important academic initiatives to launch the Atlantic perspective From 1995 2010 the Atlantic History Seminar sponsored an annual meeting of young historians engaged in creative research on aspects of Atlantic History In all 366 young historians came through the Seminar program 202 from universities in the US and 164 from universities abroad Its purpose was to advance the scholarship of young historians of many nations interested in the common comparative and interactive aspects of the lives of the peoples in the lands that are part of the Atlantic basin mainly in the early modern period in order to contribute to the study of this transnational historical subject 6 Bailyn s Atlantic History Concepts and Contours 2005 explores the borders and contents of the emerging field which emphasizes cosmopolitan and multicultural elements that have tended to be neglected or considered in isolation by traditional historiography dealing with the Americas Bailyn s reflections stem in part from his seminar at Harvard since the mid 1980s Other important scholars are Jack Greene who directed a program at Johns Hopkins in Atlantic History from 1972 to 1992 that has now expanded to global concerns Karen Ordahl Kupperman established the Atlantic Workshop at New York University in 1997 Other scholars in the field include Ida Altman Kenneth J Andrien David Armitage Trevor Burnard Jorge Canizares Esguerra Nicholas Canny Philip D Curtin Laurent Dubois J H Elliott David Eltis Alison Games Eliga H Gould Anthony Grafton Joseph C Miller Philip D Morgan Anthony Pagden Jennifer L Anderson John Thornton James D Tracy Carla G Pestana Isaac Land Richard S Dunn and Ned C Landsman Perspectives editAlison Games 2006 explores the convergence of the multiple strands of scholarly interest that have generated the new field of Atlantic history which takes as its geographic unit of analysis the Atlantic Ocean and the four continents that surround it She argues Atlantic history is best approached as a slice of world history The Atlantic moreover is a region that has logic as a unit of historical analysis only within a limited chronology An Atlantic perspective can help historians understand changes within the region that a more limited geographic framework might obscure Attempts to write a Braudelian 7 Atlantic history one that includes and connects the entire region remain elusive driven in part by methodological impediments by the real disjunction that characterized the Atlantic s historical and geographic components by the disciplinary divisions that discourage historians from speaking to and writing for each other and by the challenge of finding a vantage point that is not rooted in any single place 8 Colonial studies editOne impetus for Atlantic studies began in the 1960s with the historians of slavery who started tracking the routes of the transatlantic slave trade 9 A second source came from historians who studied the colonial history of the United States Many were trained in early modern European history and were familiar with the historiography of the British Empire which had been introduced a century before by George Louis Beer and Charles McLean Andrews Historians studying colonialism have long been open to interdisciplinary perspectives such as comparative approaches In addition there was a frustration involved in writing about very few people in a small remote colony Atlantic history opens the horizon to large forces at work over great distances 8 Criticism editSome critics have complained that Atlantic history is little more than imperial history under another name 10 It has been argued that it is too expansive in claiming to subsume both of the American continents Africa and Europe without seriously engaging with them 11 According to Caroline Dodds Pennock indigenous people are often seen as static recipients of transatlantic encounter despite the fact that thousands of Native Americans crossed the ocean during the sixteenth century some by choice 12 Canadian scholar Ian K Steele argued that Atlantic history will tend to draw students interested in exploring their country s historian beyond national myths while offering historical support for such 21st century policies as the North American Free Trade Agreement NAFTA the Organization of American States OAS the North Atlantic Treaty Organization NATO the New Europe Christendom and even the United Nations UN He concludes The early modern Atlantic can even be read as a natural antechamber for American led globalization of capitalism and serve as an historical challenge to the coalescing New Europe No wonder that the academic reception of the new Atlantic history has been enthusiastic in the United States and less so in Britain France Spain and Portugal where histories of national Atlantic empires continue to thrive 13 See also edit nbsp history portalColumbian exchange Atlantic World Atlantic Ocean Piracy in the Atlantic World Atlantic hurricanes Atlantic Creole Transatlantic migrations Atlantic revolutions Atlanticism European colonization of the AmericasNotes edit Bailyn Bernard 2005 Atlantic History Concept and Contours Cambridge Mass Harvard University Press 2005 Karen Ordahl Kupperman The Atlantic in World History 2012 a b O Reilly 2004 Edoardo Tortarolo Eighteenth century Atlantic history old and new History of European Ideas 2008 34 4 pp 369 374 See Archived October 24 2008 at the Wayback Machine About the Seminar atlantic fas harvard edu Retrieved July 13 2021 A reference to the great classic The Mediterranean and the Mediterranean World in the Age of Philip II 2 vol 1949 by Fernand Braudel 1902 1985 a b Games 2006 Philip Curtin 1998 Philip D Morgan ed 2009 Atlantic History A Critical Appraisal Oxford UP p 35 ISBN 9780195320336 Nancy L Rhoden 2014 English Atlantics Revisited Essays Honouring Ian K Steele McGill Queen s Press p 19 ISBN 9780773560406 Dodds Pennock Caroline June 29 2020 Aztecs Abroad Uncovering the Early Indigenous Atlantic The American Historical Review Archived from the original on July 27 2020 Retrieved December 30 2020 Ian K Steele Featured Reviews in American Historical Review Dec 2009 v 114 5 pp 1405 7 1 Bibliography editAltman Ida Emigrants and Society Extremadura and Spanish America in the Sixteenth Century Berkeley University of California Press 1989 Altman Ida Transatlantic Ties in the Spanish Empire Brihuega Spain and Puebla Mexico 1560 1620 Stanford CA Stanford University Press 2000 Altman Ida and James J Horn eds To Make America European Emigration in the Early Modern Period Berkeley University of California Press 1991 Armitage David and Michael J Braddick eds The British Atlantic World 1500 1800 2002 see especially the lead article by Armitage Three Concepts of Atlantic History Anderson Jennifer L Mahogany The Costs of Luxury in Early America Cambridge Harvard University Press 2012 Bailyn Bernard Voyagers to the West a passage in the peopling of America on the eve of the Revolution Knopf 1986 winner of the Pulitzer Prize in History Bailyn Bernard Atlantic History Concept and Contours 2005 ISBN 978 0 674 01688 0 Bodle Wayne Atlantic History Is the New New Social History William and Mary Quarterly 2007 64 1 203 220 ISSN 0043 5597 Canny Nicholas and Philip Morgan eds The Oxford Handbook of the Atlantic World 1450 1850 2011 Curtin Philip D The Rise and Fall of the Plantation Complex Essays in Atlantic History 1998 ISBN 0521629438 Egerton Douglas R et al The Atlantic World A History 1400 1888 2007 college textbook 530 pp Elliott John H Empires of the Atlantic World Britain and Spain in America 1492 1830 2007 608 pp ISBN 030012399X Eltis David The Rise of African Slavery in the Americas 2000 Fernlund Kevin Jon American Exceptionalism or Atlantic Unity Frederick Jackson Turner and the Enduring Problem of American Historiography New Mexico Historical Review 2014 89 3 359 399 Klooster Wim The Dutch Moment War Trade and Settlement in the Seventeenth Century Atlantic World 2016 Klooster Wim and Gert Oostindie Realm between Empires The Second Dutch Atlantic 1680 1815 Cornell UP 2018 348 pp pnline review Landsman Ned C Scotland and Its First American Colony 1683 1765 Princeton Princeton University Press 1985 Landsman Ned C Crossroads of Empire The Middle Colonies in British North America Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press 2010 Games Alison Atlantic History Definitions Challenges and Opportunities American Historical Review 2006 111 3 741 757 doi 10 1086 ahr 111 3 741 Games Alison and Adam Rothman eds Major Problems in Atlantic History Documents and Essays 2007 544 pp primary and secondary sources Gerbner Katharine Theorizing Conversion Christianity Colonization and Consciousness in the Early Modern Atlantic World History Compass 2015 13 3 pp 134 147 Godechot Jacques Histoire de l Atlantique Paris Bordas 1947 Gould Eliga H and Peter S Onuf eds Empire and Nation The American Revolution in the Atlantic World Johns Hopkins University Press 2005 391 pages excerpt and text search Gould Eliga H Entangled Atlantic Histories A Response from the Anglo American Periphery The American Historical Review 112 1415 1422 December 2007 doi 10 1086 ahr 112 5 1415 Greene Jack P and Philip D Morgan eds Atlantic History A Critical Appraisal 2009 371 pp major historiographical review Hancock David Citizens of the World London Merchants and the Integration of the British Atlantic Community 1735 1785 1995 Land Isaac Tidal Waves the New Coastal History Journal of Social History 2007 40 3 731 743 ISSN 0022 4529 Mancke Elizabeth and Carole Shammas eds The Creation of the British Atlantic World 2005 408 pages ISBN 0801880394 Miller Joseph C ed The Princeton Companion to Atlantic History 2014 ASIN B00NRB9QVI Nagl Dominik No Part of the Mother Country but Distinct Dominions Law State Formation and Governance in England Massachusetts und South Carolina 1630 1769 2013 Olwell Robert and Alan Tully eds Cultures and Identities in Colonial British America 2006 394 pages O Reilly William Genealogies of Atlantic History Atlantic Studies 1 2004 66 84 Plank Geoffrey Atlantic Wars From the Fifteenth Century to the Age of Revolution Oxford University Press 2020 Polasky Janet L Revolutions without Borders Yale UP 2015 392 pp online review Rediker Marcus Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea Merchant Seamen Pirates and the Anglo American Maritime World 1700 1750 1987 Skeehan Danielle C The Fabric of Empire Material and Literary Cultures of the Global Atlantic 1650 1850 Johns Hopkins University Press 2020 Smith Joshua M Toward a Taxonomy of Maritime Historians International Journal of Maritime History XXV 2 December 2013 1 16 Steele Ian K Bernard Bailyn s American Atlantic History and Theory 2007 46 1 48 58 ISSN 0018 2656 Thornton John Africa and Africans in the Making of the Atlantic World 1400 1800 2nd ed 1998 Wilson Kathleen ed A New Imperial History Culture Identity and Modernity in Britain and the Empire 2004 385 pp Wilson Kathleen The Island Race Englishness Empire and Gender in the Eighteenth Century London and New York Routledge 2003 External links editH Atlantic daily email discussions on related scholarly topics includes book reviews and announcements Oxford Bibliography Online Atlantic History annotated bibliography prepared by scholars International Seminar on the History of the Atlantic World 1500 1825 2003 announcement of Atlantic Studies Atlantic Studies Literary Cultural and Historical Perspectives from Essex University in UK Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Atlantic history amp oldid 1205426806, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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