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Record ID harvard_bibliographic_metadata/ab.bib.12.20150123.full.mrc:641039616:5404
Source harvard_bibliographic_metadata
Download Link /show-records/harvard_bibliographic_metadata/ab.bib.12.20150123.full.mrc:641039616:5404?format=raw

LEADER: 05404cam a22004818a 4500
001 012768264-3
005 20110711153712.0
008 100824s2011 enkab b 001 0 eng
015 $aGBB0A6907$2bnb
016 7 $a015643521$2Uk
020 $a9780199210879 (hbk.)
020 $a019921087X (hbk.)
035 0 $aocn663438332
040 $aUKM$cUKM$dYDXCP$dCDX$dCUV$dOBE$dBWX$dERASA
043 $al------
050 4 $aD210$b.O94 2011
082 04 $a909.09821$222
245 04 $aThe Oxford handbook of the Atlantic world, 1450-1850 /$cedited by Nicholas Canny and Philip Morgan.
246 3 $aHandbook of the Atlantic world, 1450-1850
246 3 $aAtlantic world, 1450-1850
246 3 $aHandbook of the Atlantic world, c.1450-c.1850
246 3 $aAtlantic world, c.1450-c.1850
260 $aOxford ;$bNew York :$bOxford University Press,$c2011.
300 $axviii, 671 p. :$bill., maps ;$c26 cm.
490 1 $aOxford handbooks in history
500 $aSeries taken from jacket.
504 $aIncludes bibliographical references and index.
505 00 $tThe worlds of Europeans, Africans, and Americans, c.1490 /$rJoan-Pau Rubiés --$tAfricans, early European contacts, and the emergent diaspora /$rDavid Northrup --$tNative Americans and Europeans :$tearly encounters in the Caribbean and along the Atlantic coast /$rNeil L. Whitehead --$tAtlantic seafaring /$rN.A.M. Rodger --$tKnowledge and cartography in the early Atlantic /$rMatthew H. Edney --$tViolence in the Atlantic :$tsixteenth and seventeenth centuries /$rJean Frédéric Schaub --$tThe Atlantic world, the senses, and the arts /$rDavid S. Shields --$tThe Iberian Atlantic to 1650 /$rStuart B. Schwartz --$tThe Northern European Atlantic world /$rWim Klooster --$tThe Spanish Atlantic, 1650-1780 /$rIda Altman --$tThe Portuguese Atlantic world, c.650-c.760 /$rA.J.R. Russell-Wood --$tThe British Atlantic /$rJoyce E. Chaplin --$tThe French Atlantic world in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries /$rSilvia Marzagalli --$tVoices from the other side :
505 00 $tnative perspectives from New Spain, Peru, and North America /$rKevin Terraciano --$tAfrica, slavery, and the slave trade, mid-seventeenth to mid-eighteenth centuries /$rDavid Eltis --$tThe ecological Atlantic /$rJ.R. McNeill --$tMovements of people in the Atlantic world, 1450-1850 /$rWilliam O'Reilly --$tAtlantic trade and commodities, 1402-1815 /$rDavid Hancock --$tPeople and places in the Americas :$ta comparative approach /$rRichard L. Kagan --$tHousehold formation, lineage, and gender relations in the early modern Atlantic world /$rCarole Shammas --$tPolity formation and Atlantic political narratives /$rElizabeth Mancke --$tAtlantic law :$ttransformations of a regional legal regime /$rLauren Benton --$tAtlantic warfare, 1440-1763 /$rIra D. Gruber --$tReligion in the Atlantic world /$rKenneth Mills --$tThe challenge of the new /$rAnthony Pagden --$tScience, nature, race /$rSusan Scott Parrish --
505 00 $tIdentities and processes of identification in the Atlantic world /$rTamar Herzog --$tSevered connections :$tAmerican indigenous peoples and the Atlantic world in an era of imperial transformation /$rDaniel K. Richter and Troy L. Thompson --$tThe American revolution in Atlantic perspective /$rDavid Armitage --$tThe Haitian revolution in Atlantic perspective /$rDavid Geggus --$tPopular movements in colonial Brazil /$rLaura De Mello E Souza and Joāo José Reis --$tRevolution in the Hispanic world, 1808-1816 /$rJaime E. Rodríguez O. --$tAfrica in the Atlantic world, c.1760-c.1840 /$rRobin Law --$tSlavery and antislavery, 1760-1820 /$rChristopher Leslie Brown --$tAtlantic world, 1760-1820 :$teconomic impact /$rCraig Muldrew --$tLate Atlantic history /$rEmma Rothschild.
520 $aThe essays in this volume provide a comprehensive overview of Atlantic history from c.1450 to c.1850, offering a wide-ranging and authoritative account of the movement of people, plants, pathogens, products, and cultural practices-to mention some of the key agents{u2014}around and within the Atlantic basin. As a result of these movements, new peoples, economies, societies, polities, and cultures arose in the lands and islands touched by the Atlantic Ocean, while others were destroyed.
520 $aThe team of scholars in this volume seek to describe, explain, and, occasionally, challenge conventional wisdom concerning these path-breaking developments. They demonstrate connections, explore contrasts, and probe themes. During the four centuries encompassed by this collection, pan-Atlantic webs of association emerged that progressively linked people, objects, and beliefs across and within the region. Events in one corner of the Atlantic world had effects, reverberations thousands of miles away. The great virtue of thinking in Atlantic terms is that it encourages broad perspectives, unexpected comparisons, trans-national orientations, and expanded horizons; the parochialism that characterizes so much history writing and instruction today, as in the past, has a chance of being overcome.
650 0 $aHistory, Modern.
650 0 $aCivilization, Modern.
651 0 $aAtlantic Ocean$xHistory.
655 7 $aHistory.$2fast
700 1 $aCanny, Nicholas P.
700 1 $aMorgan, Philip D.,$d1949-
830 0 $aOxford handbooks.
899 $a415_565303
988 $a20110511
049 $aHLSS
906 $0OCLC