ABSTRACT

Throughout history, varying responses to catastrophe have revealed much about a society's cultural and philosophical character. In Dreadful Visitations , leading scholars of different disciplines examine eighteenth-century responses to natural disaster, showing how human agency played an active role in the creation of destructive circumstances, and how these disasters helped to establish national and moral identities in the Age of Reason. Contributors: David Arnold, Daniel Gordon, Carla Hesse, George Starr, Alan Taylor, Steven Tobriner and Charles Walker.

part II|103 pages

Colonial Perspectives and New World Calamities

chapter 4|31 pages

Hunger in the Garden of Plenty

The Bengal Famine of 1770

chapter 5|32 pages

Shaking the Unstable Empire

The Lima, Quito, and Arequipa Earthquakes, 1746, 1783, and 1797 1

chapter 6|37 pages

“The Hungry Year”

1789 on the Northern Border of Revolutionary America