• Media type: E-Book
  • Title: Imagining the British Atlantic after the American Revolution
  • Contains: Frontmatter -- -- Contents -- -- Illustrations -- -- Acknowledgments -- -- Introduction: Division, Renewal, and Repetition – Imagining the British Atlantic after the American Revolution -- -- 1 Transoceanic Spectacles of Dissection: London’s Anatomical Art in Eighteenth-Century Pennsylvania -- -- 2 Disavowed and Reprobated: Anti-Quakerism in an Age of Revolution -- -- 3 British Atlantic Catholicism in the Age of Revolution and Reaction -- -- 6 Philippe Jacques de Loutherbourg’s Romantic Retreat: Magic, Mesmerism, and Prophecy, 1776–1802 173 -- -- 7 From Radical Enthusiasm to Liberal Melancholia: Hugh Henry Brackenridge and Modern Chivalry, Part 1 and 2 -- -- 8 Penal Reform and Politics in Early Nineteenth-Century England: “A Prison Must Be a Prison” -- -- 9 When the Atlantic Went Global: A Note on Slavery and Rebellion in Fletcher Christian’s Pitcairn -- -- Contributors -- -- Index
  • Contributor: Makdisi, Saree [Other]; Meranze, Michael [Other]
  • imprint: Toronto: University of Toronto Press, [2017]
  • Published in: UCLA Clark Memorial Library Series
  • Extent: 1 online resource
  • Language: English
  • DOI: 10.3138/9781442624375
  • ISBN: 9781442624375
  • Identifier:
  • Keywords: Revolutions Atlantic Ocean Region Historiography ; British Atlantic Ocean Region Historiography ; British. ; Revolutions. ; HISTORY / Europe / General
  • Origination:
  • Footnote: In English
    Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web
  • Description: Between 1750 and 1820, tides of revolution swept the Atlantic world. From the new industrial towns of Great Britain to the plantations of Haiti, they heralded both the rise of democratic nationalism and the subsequent surge of imperial reaction.In Imagining the British Atlantic after the American Revolution, nine essays consider these revolutionary transformations from a variety of literary, visual, and historical perspectives. On topics ranging from painting and poetry to prison reform, the essays challenge and complicate our understandings of revolution and reaction within the transatlantic imagination. Drawing on examples from different local and regional contexts, they demonstrate the many remarkably local ways that revolution and empire were experienced in London, Pennsylvania, Pitcairn Island, and points in between.Published by the University of Toronto Press in association with the UCLA Center for Seventeenth- and Eighteenth-Century Studies and the William Andrews Clark Memorial Library.
  • Access State: Restricted Access | Information to licenced electronic resources of the SLUB