Empire and nation : the American Revolution in the Atlantic world

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Empire and nation : the American Revolution in the Atlantic world

edited By Eliga H. Gould and Peter S. Onuf

(Anglo-America in the transatlantic world)

Johns Hopkins University Press, c2005

Available at  / 9 libraries

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Includes bibliographical references and index

HTTP:URL=http://www.loc.gov/catdir/bios/jhu051/2004011135.html Information=Contributor biographical information

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Description and Table of Contents

Description

How did events and ideas from elsewhere in the British empire influence development in the thirteen American colonies? What was the effect of the American Revolution on the wider Atlantic world? In Empire and Nation, leading historians reconsider the American Revolution as a transnational event, with many sources and momentous implications for Ireland, Africa, the West Indies, Canada, and Britain itself. The opening section situates the origins of the American Revolution in the commercial, ethnic, and political ferment that characterized Britain's Atlantic empire at the close of the Seven Years' War (1756-1763). The empire then experienced extraordinary changes, ranging from the first stirrings of nationalism in Ireland to the dramatic expansion of British rule in Canada, Africa, and India. The second part focuses on the rebellion of the thirteen colonies-touching on slavery and ethnicity, the changing nature of religious faith, and ideas about civil society and political organization. Finally, contributors examine the changes wrought by the American Revolution both within Britain's remaining imperial possessions and among the other states in the emerging "concert of Europe." The essays in Empire and Nation challenge facile assumptions about the "exceptional" character of the republic's founding moment, even as they invite readers to think anew about the complex ways in which the Revolution reshaped both American society and the Atlantic world.

Table of Contents

List of Contributors Introduction PART I: Reconstituting the Empire Chapter 1 Fears of War, Fantasies of Peace: British Politics and the Coming of the American Revolution Chapter 2 The First Union: Nationalism versus Internationalism in the American Revolution Chapter 3 War and State Formation in Revolutionary America Chapter 4 John Adams, Republican Monarchist: An Inquiry into the Origins of His Constitutional Thought Chapter 5 Revising Custom, Embracing Choice: Early American Legal Scholars and the Republicanization of the Common Law PART II: Society, Politics, and Culture in the New Nation Chapter 6 The Ratification Paradox in the Great Valley of the Appalachians Chapter 7 Similarities and Continuities: Free Society in the Tobacco South before and after the American Revolution Chapter 8 The Irish Immigrant and the Broadening of the Polity in Philadelphia, 1790-1800 Chapter 9 Dionysian Rhetoric and Apollonian Solutions: The Politics of Union and Disunion in the Age of Federalism Chapter 10 Civil Society in Post-Revolutionary America Chapter 11 Religion, Moderation, and Regime-Building in Post-Revolutionary America PART III: The American Revolution and the Atlantic World Chapter 12 The American Loyalist Diaspora and the Reconfiguration of the British Atlantic World Chapter 13 Early Slave Narratives and the Culture of the Atlantic Market Chapter 14 The British Caribbean in the Age of Revolution Chapter 15 Freedom, Migration, and the American Revolution Notes 315 Index 373

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