Edges of transatlantic commerce in the long eighteenth century / edited by Seohyon Jung and Leah M. Thomas.
Material type: TextSeries: Publisher: Abingdon ; New York, NY : Routledge, 2021Description: 1 online resource (1 volume : illustrations (black and white.)Content type:- text
- computer
- online resource
- 9780367808730
- 0367808730
- 9781000382464
- 100038246X
- 9781000382457
- 1000382451
- 382.09182/1 23
- HF495 .E34 2021
Introduction: Promises and predicaments of the long eighteenth-century transatlantic world / Seohyon Jung -- Pirates, slaves, and profligate rogues : sailors of color in the eighteenth-century maritime world / Victoria Barnett-Woods -- Commencing merchant : forms of feeling and logics of capital in Olaudah Equiano's The interesting narrative of the life of Olaudah Equiano (1789) / Emilee Durand -- Peruvia's bleeding land : bodyscape commerce in Helen Maria Williams's Peru / Leah M. Thomas -- Religion, sexuality, and antislavery resistance : the Hart sisters and Mary Prince in the Atlantic world / Jamie Rosenthal -- A cure, both for soul and body : transculturation in Robinson Crusoe's tobacco application / Corey Goergen -- One man's trash is another man's treasure : counterfeit coins and imperial commerce in 1770s Jamaica / David Mazella -- Currency, credit, and trust : naval victualing at the Cape Colony, 1795-1815 / Elizabeth C. Libero -- Epilogue: Reimagining the edge of transatlantic commerce as center / Leah M. Thomas and Seohyon Jung.
"Edges of Transatlantic Commerce in the Long Eighteenth Century re-evaluates the boundaries of the eighteenth-century Atlantic, with a focus on commerce. Commerce ranges from documented to undocumented encounters that invoke shared or conflicting ideas of value, affective experiences of the emerging global system, and the development of national economies as well as their opponents. This volume reimagines the edge as a liminal space of human interaction with a potential for an alternative historical and aesthetic knowledge through pirates and sailors of color, slavery of Africans and Native Americans, cure of tobacco, counterfeit currency in Jamaica, and credit in Cape Colony (South Africa)"--
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