Keeping Family in an Age of Long Distance Trade, Imperial Expansion, and Exile, 1550-1850
★★★★★
★★★★★
English
Keeping Family in an Age of Long Distance Trade, Imperial Expansion, and Exile, 1550--1850 brings together eleven original essays by an international group of scholars, each investigating how family, or the idea of family, was maintained or reinvented when husbands, wives, children, apprentices, servants or slaves separated, or faced separation, from their household. The result is a fresh and geographically wide-ranging discussion about the nature of family and its intersection with travel over three hundred years -- a period during which roles and relationships, within and between households, were increasingly affected by trade, settlement, and empire building. The imperial project may have influenced different regions in different ways at different times yet, as this collection reveals, families, especially those transcending national ties and traditional boundaries, were central to its progress. Together, these essays bring new understandings of the foundations of our interconnected world and of the people who contributed to it.
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Product Details
Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
Publication Date: 26 Oct 2020
Publisher: Amsterdam University Press
Publication City/Country: Netherlands
Language: English
ISBN13: 9789463722315
About
Heather Dalton is an Honorary Fellow in the School of Historical & Philosophical Studies at the University of Melbourne and member of the Cabot Project at the University of Bristol. The focus of her research is relationships in maritime trading networks and early contacts between Australasia the Americas and Europe. She is the author of Merchants and Explorers: Roger Barlow Sebastian Cabot and Networks of Atlantic Exchange 1500--1560 (2016) and co-author of Frederick II of Hohenstaufens Australasian cockatoo: symbol of detente between East and West and evidence of the Ayyubid Sultanates global reach (Parergon 2018). Dr Daltons article A Sulphur-crested Cockatoo in fifteenth century Mantua: Rethinking symbols of sanctity and patterns of trade (Renaissance Studies 2014) won the ANZAMEMS inaugural Philippa Maddern Early Career Researcher Publication Prize in 2016.