Part I. The Atlantic Background: 1. The foundation of the Atlantic world, 1250–1600; Part II. Three Atlantic Worlds: 2. The European background; 3. The African background; 4. The American world, 1450–1700; Part III. The Nature of Encounter and its Aftermath: 5. Conquest; 6. Colonization; 7. Contact; Part IV. Culture Transition and Change: 8. Transfer and retention in language; 9. Aesthetic change; 10. Religious stability and change; 11. The revolutionary moment in the Atlantic.
An overview of the history of the Atlantic Basin before 1830, describing interactions between the inhabitants of Africa, Europe and North and South America.
John K. Thornton is Professor of History and African American Studies at Boston University. He is the author of Warfare in Atlantic Africa, 1500–1800 (1999) and Africa and Africans in the Making of the Atlantic World, 1400–1800 (Cambridge, 1992, 1998) and the co-author of Central Africans, Atlantic Creoles and the Foundation of the Americas, 1585–1660 (Cambridge, 2007) with Linda M. Heywood.
'John Thornton captures the moment Africa, Europe and the Americas
came together and the new world that was created. A Cultural
History of the Atlantic World [1250–1820] will be a foundation
stone in the study of the Atlantic, simultaneously an entry point
for novices, a reference for established scholars, and a guide for
future studies. An extraordinary achievement.' Ira Berlin,
University of Maryland
'Only a handful of historians can master the cascading new
scholarship on African, Latin American, European and North American
history in the pre-modern era. John Thornton is the premier
historian of this endeavor. In tracing the emergence of hybrid
cultures - from language transfer to evolving political structures
to interpenetrating musical styles and forms of worship - he has no
equal. Brilliantly covering half a millennium of Atlantic basin
interaction, this is a must-read book.' Gary B. Nash, University of
California, Los Angeles
'John Thornton's [book] is a remarkable accomplishment. With deep
learning and full immersion in source documents from four
continents and many languages, he tells a story of the Atlantic
basin in the early modern world that identifies broad unities
without erasing the complexities of local circumstances. And that
story is one with a compelling narrative arc, from its beginnings
long before 1492 to its end in the revolutionary upheavals of the
late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries.' Daniel K. Richter,
University of Pennsylvania
'Finally we have an Atlantic history in which the peoples and
cultures of the three continents are given equal weight, and in
which Africans, Native Americans and Europeans are all important
actors in and creators of this history. The integration of primary
sources, current scholarship, and new interpretations makes
Thornton's book essential reading for scholars, students and the
general public.' Stuart B. Schwartz, Yale University
'His judgements are balanced, his narrative lucid … impressive.'
History Today
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