one publication added to basket [292429] | Sea changes: Historicizing the ocean
Klein, B.; Mackenthun, G. (Ed.) (2004). Sea changes: Historicizing the ocean. Eerste druk. Routledge: New York. ISBN 9780415946513. 219 pp.
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Keywords |
Cultural anthropology Disciplines > Social sciences > Anthropology > Social anthropology History Identities Pacific Ocean Marine/Coastal |
Authors | | Top |
- Klein, B., editor
- Mackenthun, G., editor
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Content |
- Dening, G. (2004). Deep times, deep spaces: Civilizing the sea, in: Klein, B. et al. (Ed.) Sea changes: historicizing the ocean. pp. 13-35, more
- Smith, V. (2004). Costume changes: Passing at sea and on the beach, in: Klein, B. et al. (Ed.) Sea changes: historicizing the ocean. pp. 37-53, more
- Warren, J.-F. (2004). The global economy and the Sulu Zone, in: Klein, B. et al. (Ed.) Sea changes: historicizing the ocean. pp. 55-74, more
- Chappell, D. (2004). Ahab's boat: Non-European seamen in western ships of exploration and commerce, in: Klein, B. et al. (Ed.) Sea changes: historicizing the ocean. pp. 75-89, more
- Klein, B. (2004). Staying afloat: Literary shipboard encounters from Columbus to Equiano, in: Klein, B. et al. (Ed.) Sea changes: historicizing the ocean. pp. 91-109, more
- Rediker, M. (2004). The Red Atlantic; or, "a terrible blast swept over the heaving sea", in: Klein, B. et al. (Ed.) Sea Changes: Historicizing the Ocean. pp. 111-130, more
- Mackenthun, G. (2004). Chartless voyages and protean geographies: Nineteenth-century American fictions of the Black Atlantic, in: Klein, B. et al. (Ed.) Sea changes: historicizing the ocean. pp. 131-148, more
- Pettinger, A. (2004). "At sea - coloured passenger", in: Klein, B. et al. (Ed.) Sea changes: historicizing the ocean. pp. 149-166, more
- Armstrong, T. (2004). Slavery, insurance, and sacrifice in the Black Atlantic, in: Klein, B. et al. Sea changes: Historicizing the ocean. pp. 167-185, more
- Hulme, P. (2004). Cast away: The uttermost parts of the earth, in: Klein, B. et al. (Ed.) Sea changes: historicizing the ocean. pp. 187-201, more
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Abstract |
The sea has been the site of radical changes in human lives and national histories. It has been an agent of colonial oppression but also of indigenous resistance, a site of loss, dispersal and enforced migration but also of new forms of solidarity and affective kinship. Sea Changes re-evaluates the view that history happens mainly on dry land and makes the case for a creative reinterpretation of the role of the sea: not merely as a passage from one country to the next, but a historical site deserving close study. |
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