This volume explores the transnational dimensions of mutiny and maritime radicalism during the great cycle of war and revolution that began in the mid-1750s and continued until the 1840s. The central theme of the volume is mutiny - its causes; frequency; forms; patterns and outcomes - charting; linking and comparing maritime insurrections in different oceans; on warships; merchant vessels and convict ships. The contributions concentrate on the mutineers themselves; their social composition; self-organisation; objectives and ideas. Also included is unrest in port cities; sites of international exchange between maritime and landed forms of resistance. Sailors spent significant amounts of time in port; sometimes connecting shipboard unrest and radical movements on land in personal; political and social ways. The contributions cover the age of revolution in its full geographic extent; including the Atlantic with its wars and revolutions; but also the Indian and Pacific Ocean and the South China Sea.
#3397657 in Books Cameron Hawkins 2016-07-19Original language:English 8.98 x .79 x 5.98l; #File Name: 1107115442316 pagesRoman Artisans and the Urban Economy
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