ABSTRACT

The Atlantic in Global History is a collection of original essays by leading authors that both introduce the main themes of Atlantic history and expand the category of the Atlantic chronologically, spatially, and methodologically.

Moving away from the nation-state focused model of Atlantic history, this book emphasizes the comparisons among national experiences of the Atlantic. Meanwhile, by extending beyond the early modern period and into the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, it presents the continued analytical value of the Atlantic paradigm. Each chapter explores the events that formed the nations and cultures of the Atlantic region and examines the Atlantic’s relationship with non-Atlantic communities.

This second edition is updated with a new introduction, which includes a section dedicated to developments in the field since the publication of the previous edition, and a new guide for instructors, with suggestions for classroom use. The volume’s broad global and chronological coverage makes it an ideal book for students and lecturers of Atlantic History.

part I|92 pages

Comparing Atlantics

chapter 1|19 pages

A Catholic Atlantic

chapter 2|19 pages

The Devil in the New World

A Transnational Perspective

chapter 3|22 pages

Jews in the Early Modern Atlantic

Crossing Boundaries, Keeping Faith

chapter 4|17 pages

“Our Indians”

European Empires and the History of the Native American South

part II|91 pages

Beyond the Atlantic

chapter 7|19 pages

ReOrienting Atlantic History

The Global Dimensions of the “Western” Rice Trade

chapter 10|14 pages

Pushing the Atlantic Envelope

Interoceanic Perspectives on Atlantic History

part III|78 pages

The Evolving Atlantic

chapter 12|19 pages

Continuity and Crisis

Cuban Slavery, Spanish Colonialism, and the Atlantic World in the Nineteenth Century