Transactioneer

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A01=Alice Marples
Author_Alice Marples
british enlightenment science
Category=DNBT
Category=GLZ
Category=PDX
Category=WN
empire and science
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_science
forthcoming
hans sloane history
history of medicine
knowledge exchange history
museum collecting origins
natural history collecting
royal society networks

Product details

  • ISBN 9781421456072
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 08 Dec 2026
  • Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The history of how transactions built Britain's empire of public science.

Hans Sloane is often remembered as the founding collector of the British Museum. In The Transactioneer, Alice Marples offers a different portrait: not a heroic architect of Enlightenment progress, but a skilled manager of transactions—of specimens, correspondence, credit, and trust—whose practices helped redefine how natural knowledge was made public in eighteenth-century Britain.

The book examines how this knowledge was amassed and managed at the turn of the eighteenth century, tracing the daily labor of collecting, storing, cross-referencing, classifying, and circulating information through paper technologies and material exchange. Rather than treating Sloane as exceptional, Marples uses him as a lens through which to reconstruct a broader culture of knowledge-making that moved between private homes, coffeehouses, medical marketplaces, trading networks, and the Royal Society. Sloane's networks extended from Scottish cartographers and Irish landowners to Caribbean plantations and global trading circuits. These exchanges were embedded in systems of empire and slavery, whose violence and exclusions shaped both the materials collected and the authority claimed in their name. Satirized in 1700 as "The Transactioneer" for his reliance on correspondents and appetite for accumulation, Sloane nonetheless helped align natural history with commercial practice and a rhetoric of the "public good" that served to justify institutional power.

By reconstructing the material and moral economies that sustained early modern collecting, Marples reveals how trust, credit, and exchange underpinned the rise of public science—and how the management of knowledge became inseparable from the management of empire.

Alice Marples is a historian of early modern science, collecting, and empire.

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