ABSTRACT

This book offers a global history of the Indian Ocean and focuses on a holistic perspective of the worlds of water. It builds on maritime historian Michael Naylor Pearson’s works, his unorthodox approach and strong influence on the study of the Indian Ocean in viewing the oceanic space as replete with human experiences and not as an artefact of empire or as the theatre of European commercial and imperial transits focused only on trade.

This interdisciplinary volume presents several ways of writing the history of the Indian Ocean. The chapters explore the changing nature of Indian Ocean history through diverse themes, including state and capital, regional identities, maritime networking, South Asian immigrants, Bay of Bengal linkages, the East India Company, Indian seamen, formal and informal collaboration in imperial networking, scientific transfers, pearling, the issues of colonial copyright, customs, excise and port cities.

The volume will be useful to scholars and researchers of global history, modern history, maritime history, medieval history, Indian history, colonial history and world history.

chapter |16 pages

Introduction

Indian Ocean histories

part I|31 pages

Historiographies, methodologies and scale in the Indian Ocean

chapter 1|13 pages

The Indian Ocean

Global nexus (1500–1800)

chapter 2|16 pages

The sodden archive

Africa, the Atlantic and the Indian Ocean

part II|123 pages

Case studies

chapter 7|19 pages

Physicians, surgeons, merchants and healers

Production, circulation and reconfiguration of knowledge in eighteenth-century Portuguese India

part III|74 pages

New histories

chapter 9|21 pages

Hazards and history on the Western Australian coast

The ‘Pearling Fleet Disaster’ of 1887

chapter 10|18 pages

Landscape, Rajah and wax prints

Contemporary archaeologies of India in Mozambique

chapter 11|33 pages

Littoral shell tracks

Tracing Burma’s transregional pearl histories

part IV|22 pages

Reminiscences

chapter 12|15 pages

Michael Naylor Pearson

The discipline of history, the sea and the man

chapter 13|5 pages

Afterword