Nineteenth-Century Worlds

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Family Colonisation Loan Society
female
Female Convicts
Free Woman
George III
Grape Vines
Greenland's Icy Mountains
Greenland’s Icy Mountains
HTC
Imperious Passion
Irish Poor
land
levant
Mary Wollstonecraft
middle
Middle Passage
Middle Passage Experience
migration
Nancy Prince
National Library
Nineteenth Century World
passage
Rue Le Peletier
Sea Water
single
Single Female Migration
southern
Southern Levant
Tasmanian Aborigines
Umteteli Wa Bantu
van
Van Diemen's Land
Van Diemen’s Land
Yehoshua Ben Arieh
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138878228
  • Weight: 560g
  • Dimensions: 189 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 10 Apr 2015
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This volume assembles a wide range of studies that together provide—through their interdisciplinary range, international scope, and historical emphases—an original scholarly exploration of one of the most important topics in recent nineteenth-century studies: the emergence in the nineteenth century of forms of global experience that have developed more recently into rapidly expanding processes of globalization and their attendant collisions of race, religion, ethnicity, population groups, natural environments, national will and power. Emphasizing such links between global networks past and present, the essays in this volume engage with the latest work in postcolonial, cosmopolitan, and globalization theory while speaking directly to the most pressing concerns of contemporary geopolitics. Each essay examines specific cultural and historical circumstances in the formation of nineteenth-century worlds from a range of disciplinary perspectives, including economics, political history, natural history, philosophy, the history of medicine and disease, religious studies, literary criticism, art history, and colonial studies. Detailed in their particular modes of analysis yet integrated into a collective conversation about the nineteenth century’s profound impact on our present worlds, these inquiries also explore the economic, political, and cultural determinants on nineteenth-century types of transnational experience as interweaving forces creating new material frameworks and conceptual models for comprehending major human categories—such as race, gender, subjectivity, and national identity—in global terms. As nineteenth-century global intersections differ in important ways from the shapes of globalization today, however, the essays in this volume generate new ways of understanding emergent patterns of worldwide experience in the age of imperialism and thereby stimulate fresh insights into the dynamics of global formations and conflicts today.