A world at sea : maritime practices and global history
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
A world at sea : maritime practices and global history
(The early modern Americas)
University of Pennsylvania Press, c2020
- : hbk
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Note
Notes: p. [193]-246
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The past twenty-five years have brought a dramatic expansion of scholarship in maritime history, including new research on piracy, long-distance trade, and seafaring cultures. Yet maritime history still inhabits an isolated corner of world history, according to editors Lauren Benton and Nathan Perl-Rosenthal. Benton and Perl-Rosenthal urge historians to place the relationship between maritime and terrestrial processes at the center of the field and to analyze the links between global maritime practices and major transformations in world history.
A World at Sea consists of nine original essays that sharpen and expand our understanding of practices and processes across the land-sea divide and the way they influenced global change. The first section highlights the regulatory order of the seas as shaped by strategies of land-based polities and their agents and by conflicts at sea. The second section studies documentary practices that aggregated and conveyed information about sea voyages and encounters, and it traces the wide-ranging impact of the explosion of new information about the maritime world. Probing the political symbolism of the land-sea divide as a threshold of power, the last section features essays that examine the relationship between littoral geographies and sociolegal practices spanning land and sea. Maritime history, the contributors show, matters because the oceans were key sites of experimentation, innovation, and disruption that reflected and sparked wide-ranging global change.
Contributors: Lauren Benton, Adam Clulow, Xing Hang, David Igler, Jeppe Mulich, Lisa Norling, Nathan Perl-Rosenthal, Carla Rahn Phillips, Catherine Phipps, Matthew Raffety, Margaret Schotte.
Table of Contents
Contents
Introduction. Making Maritime History Global
Nathan Perl-Rosenthal and Lauren Benton
Part I. Currents
Chapter 1. Why Did Anyone Go to Sea? Structures of Maritime Enlistment from Family Traditions to Violent Coercion
Carla Rahn Phillips
Chapter 2. Between the Company and Koxinga: Territorial Waters, Trade, and War over Deerskins
Adam Clulow and Xing Hang
Chapter 3. "The Law Is the Lord of the Sea": Maritime Law as Global Maritime History
Matthew Taylor Raffety
Part II. Dispatches
Chapter 4. Reading Cargoes: Letters and the Problem of Nationality in the Age of Privateering
Nathan Perl-Rosenthal
Chapter 5. Sailors, States, and the Creation of Nautical Knowledge
Margaret Schotte
Chapter 6. Indigenous Maritime Travelers and Knowledge Production
David Igler
Part III. Thresholds
Chapter 7. Maritime Marronage in Colonial Borderlands
Jeppe Mulich
Chapter 8. Sovereignty at the Water's Edge: Japan's Opening as Coastal Encounter
Catherine Phipps
Chapter 9. Working Women Who Got Wet: A Global Survey of Women in Premodern and Early Modern Fisheries
Lisa Norling
Afterword. Land-Sea Regimes in World History
Lauren Benton and Nathan Perl-Rosenthal
Notes
Index
List of Contributors
Acknowledgments
by "Nielsen BookData"