Bültmann & Gerriets
Cultural Economies of the Atlantic World
Objects and Capital in the Transatlantic Imagination
von Victoria Barnett-Woods
Verlag: Routledge
Gebundene Ausgabe
ISBN: 978-0-367-45800-3
Erschienen am 28.04.2020
Sprache: Englisch
Format: 235 mm [H] x 157 mm [B] x 21 mm [T]
Gewicht: 601 Gramm
Umfang: 308 Seiten

Preis: 202,50 €
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Biografische Anmerkung
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Klappentext

Victoria Barnett-Woods is currently Visiting Assistant Professor at Loyola University Maryland.



Introduction Part I: Capitalized Bodies and the Imperial Imagination 1. "Venereal Distemper": Illicit Trade and Contagious Disease in the Journals of Captain James Cook 2. Creolizing the Gothic Narrative: The Politics of Witchcraft, Gender and "Black" Magic in Charlotte Smith's The Story of Henrietta 3. Black Medical Practitioners and Knowledge as Cultural Capital in the Greater Caribbean Part II: Representation and Power in the Contact Zone 4. Materializing the Immaterial: Creating Capital in a Mirrored Image 5. Reading African Material Culture in the Contact Zone: Willem Bosman's New and Accurate Description of the Coast of Guinea 6. Fetishes and the Fetishized: Material Culture and Obeah in the British Caribbean Part III: Consuming Cultures in the Colonial Atlantic 7. Maple: The Sugar of Abolitionist Aspirations 8. Chocolate and the Atlantic Economy: Circuits of Trade and Knowledge Part IV: Labor and Identity in Early American Probates 9. "The Only Property I Could Dispose of to Any Advantage": Textiles as Mediators in Early Irish Louisiana 10. Institutionalizing the Slave Power at the Local Level: Deferential Care of Slaveholding Estates in Eighteenth-Century York County, Virginia Part V: Capital Networks, Capital Control 11. Conveyance and Commodity: The Ordinary Merchant Ship in the British Atlantic, 1600-1800 12. "Unless Speedily Relieved from Old or New England, the Commoner Sort of People and the Slaves Must Starve": The Changing Nature and Networks of the Barbadian Import and Trade, 1680-1700



Cultural Economies explores the dynamic intersection of material culture and transatlantic formations of "capital" in the long eighteenth century. It brings together two cutting-edge fields of inquiry-Material Studies and Atlantic Studies-into a generative collection of essays that investigate nuanced ways that capital, material culture, and differing transatlantic ideologies intersected. This ambitious, provocative work provides new interpretive critiques and methodological approaches to understanding both the material and the abstract relationships between humans and objects, including the objectification of humans, in the larger current conversation about capitalism and inevitably power, in the Atlantic world. Chronologically bracketed by events in the long-eighteenth century circum-Atlantic, these essays employ material case studies from littoral African states, to abolitionist North America, to Caribbean slavery, to medicinal practice in South America, providing both broad coverage and nuanced interpretation. Holistically, Cultural Economies demonstrates that the eighteenth-century Atlantic world of capital and materiality was intimately connected to both large and small networks that inform the hemispheric and transatlantic geopolitics of capital and nation of the present day.


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