The American Revolution Reborn
Herausgeber: Spero, Patrick; Zuckerman, Michael
The American Revolution Reborn
Herausgeber: Spero, Patrick; Zuckerman, Michael
- Gebundenes Buch
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
Patrick Spero is Librarian and Director at the American Philosophical Society Library. He is author of Frontier Country: The Politics of War in Early Pennsylvania, also available from the University of Pennsylvania Press. Michael Zuckerman is Professor of History Emeritus at the University of Pennsylvania.
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
- Edward AbbottA Paragraph History Of The American Revolution30,99 €
- Robert SearsThe Pictorial History of the American Revolution with a Sketch of the Early History of the Country the Constitution of the United States44,99 €
- The Consequences of Loyalism71,99 €
- Michael S. AdelbergThe American Revolution in Monmouth County: The Theatre of Spoil and Destruction29,99 €
- The Shiloh Campaign: Volume 122,99 €
- Journal of the American Revolution 2023: Annual Volume33,99 €
- Thomas E. SchottConfederate Generals in the Trans-Mississippi, Vol 3: Essays on America's Civil War Volume 375,99 €
-
-
-
Patrick Spero is Librarian and Director at the American Philosophical Society Library. He is author of Frontier Country: The Politics of War in Early Pennsylvania, also available from the University of Pennsylvania Press. Michael Zuckerman is Professor of History Emeritus at the University of Pennsylvania.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Amazon Digital Services LLC - Kdp
- Seitenzahl: 424
- Erscheinungstermin: 25. November 2016
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 158mm x 37mm
- Gewicht: 744g
- ISBN-13: 9780812248463
- ISBN-10: 0812248465
- Artikelnr.: 44887417
- Verlag: Amazon Digital Services LLC - Kdp
- Seitenzahl: 424
- Erscheinungstermin: 25. November 2016
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 158mm x 37mm
- Gewicht: 744g
- ISBN-13: 9780812248463
- ISBN-10: 0812248465
- Artikelnr.: 44887417
Patrick Spero is Librarian and Director at the American Philosophical Society Library. He is author of Frontier Country: The Politics of War in Early Pennsylvania, also available from the University of Pennsylvania Press. Michael Zuckerman is Professor of History Emeritus at the University of Pennsylvania.
Introduction. Origins
—Patrick Spero
PART I. CIVIL WARS: CHALLENGING THE PATRIOTIC NARRATIVE
Chapter 1. War Stories: Remembering and Forgetting the American Revolution
—Michael A. McDonnell
Chapter 2. The Intimacies of Occupation: Loyalties, Compromise, and
Betrayal in Revolutionary-Era Newport
—Travis Glasson
Chapter 3. Uncommon Cause: The Challenges of Disaffection in Revolutionary
Pennsylvania
—Aaron Sullivan
Chapter 4. Loyalism, Citizenship, American Identity: The Shoemaker Family
—Kimberly Nath
Chapter 5. "Executioners of Their Friends and Brethren": Naval Impressment
as an Atlantic Civil War
—Denver Brunsman
PART II. WIDER HORIZONS: DECENTERING THE NATIONALISTIC NARRATIVE
Chapter 6. British Union and American Revolution: Imperial Authoritye and
the Multinational State
—Ned C. Landsman
Chapter 7. Revisiting the Bishop Controversy
—Katherine Carté Engel
Chapter 8. Empire's Vital Extremities: British Africa and the Coming of the
American Revolution
—Bryan Rosenblithe
Chapter 9. The Great Awakening, Presbyterian Education, and the
Mobilization of Power in the Revolutionary Mid- Atlantic
—Mark Boonshoft
PART III. NEW DIRECTIONS
Chapter 10. "This Is the Skin of a Whit[e] Man": Material Memories of
Violence in Sullivan's Campaign
—Zara Anishanslin
Chapter 11. Environmental History and the War of Independence: Saltpeter
and the Continental Army's Shortage of Gunpowder
—David C. Hsiung
Chapter 12. The Problem of Order and the Transfer of Slave Property in the
Revolutionary South
—Matthew Spooner
PART IV. LEGACIES: THE AFTERLIFE OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION
Chapter 13. The United States and the Transformation of Transatlantic
Migration During the Age of Revolution and Emancipation
—Aaron Spencer Fogleman
Chapter 14. First Partition: The Troubled Origins of the Mason-Dixon Line
—Edward G. Gray
Chapter 15. The Power to Be Reborn
—David S. Shields
Conclusion. Beyond the Rebirth of the Revolution: Coming to Terms with
Coming of Age
—Michael Zuckerman
Notes
List of Contributors
Index
Acknowledgments
—Patrick Spero
PART I. CIVIL WARS: CHALLENGING THE PATRIOTIC NARRATIVE
Chapter 1. War Stories: Remembering and Forgetting the American Revolution
—Michael A. McDonnell
Chapter 2. The Intimacies of Occupation: Loyalties, Compromise, and
Betrayal in Revolutionary-Era Newport
—Travis Glasson
Chapter 3. Uncommon Cause: The Challenges of Disaffection in Revolutionary
Pennsylvania
—Aaron Sullivan
Chapter 4. Loyalism, Citizenship, American Identity: The Shoemaker Family
—Kimberly Nath
Chapter 5. "Executioners of Their Friends and Brethren": Naval Impressment
as an Atlantic Civil War
—Denver Brunsman
PART II. WIDER HORIZONS: DECENTERING THE NATIONALISTIC NARRATIVE
Chapter 6. British Union and American Revolution: Imperial Authoritye and
the Multinational State
—Ned C. Landsman
Chapter 7. Revisiting the Bishop Controversy
—Katherine Carté Engel
Chapter 8. Empire's Vital Extremities: British Africa and the Coming of the
American Revolution
—Bryan Rosenblithe
Chapter 9. The Great Awakening, Presbyterian Education, and the
Mobilization of Power in the Revolutionary Mid- Atlantic
—Mark Boonshoft
PART III. NEW DIRECTIONS
Chapter 10. "This Is the Skin of a Whit[e] Man": Material Memories of
Violence in Sullivan's Campaign
—Zara Anishanslin
Chapter 11. Environmental History and the War of Independence: Saltpeter
and the Continental Army's Shortage of Gunpowder
—David C. Hsiung
Chapter 12. The Problem of Order and the Transfer of Slave Property in the
Revolutionary South
—Matthew Spooner
PART IV. LEGACIES: THE AFTERLIFE OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION
Chapter 13. The United States and the Transformation of Transatlantic
Migration During the Age of Revolution and Emancipation
—Aaron Spencer Fogleman
Chapter 14. First Partition: The Troubled Origins of the Mason-Dixon Line
—Edward G. Gray
Chapter 15. The Power to Be Reborn
—David S. Shields
Conclusion. Beyond the Rebirth of the Revolution: Coming to Terms with
Coming of Age
—Michael Zuckerman
Notes
List of Contributors
Index
Acknowledgments
Introduction. Origins
—Patrick Spero
PART I. CIVIL WARS: CHALLENGING THE PATRIOTIC NARRATIVE
Chapter 1. War Stories: Remembering and Forgetting the American Revolution
—Michael A. McDonnell
Chapter 2. The Intimacies of Occupation: Loyalties, Compromise, and
Betrayal in Revolutionary-Era Newport
—Travis Glasson
Chapter 3. Uncommon Cause: The Challenges of Disaffection in Revolutionary
Pennsylvania
—Aaron Sullivan
Chapter 4. Loyalism, Citizenship, American Identity: The Shoemaker Family
—Kimberly Nath
Chapter 5. "Executioners of Their Friends and Brethren": Naval Impressment
as an Atlantic Civil War
—Denver Brunsman
PART II. WIDER HORIZONS: DECENTERING THE NATIONALISTIC NARRATIVE
Chapter 6. British Union and American Revolution: Imperial Authoritye and
the Multinational State
—Ned C. Landsman
Chapter 7. Revisiting the Bishop Controversy
—Katherine Carté Engel
Chapter 8. Empire's Vital Extremities: British Africa and the Coming of the
American Revolution
—Bryan Rosenblithe
Chapter 9. The Great Awakening, Presbyterian Education, and the
Mobilization of Power in the Revolutionary Mid- Atlantic
—Mark Boonshoft
PART III. NEW DIRECTIONS
Chapter 10. "This Is the Skin of a Whit[e] Man": Material Memories of
Violence in Sullivan's Campaign
—Zara Anishanslin
Chapter 11. Environmental History and the War of Independence: Saltpeter
and the Continental Army's Shortage of Gunpowder
—David C. Hsiung
Chapter 12. The Problem of Order and the Transfer of Slave Property in the
Revolutionary South
—Matthew Spooner
PART IV. LEGACIES: THE AFTERLIFE OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION
Chapter 13. The United States and the Transformation of Transatlantic
Migration During the Age of Revolution and Emancipation
—Aaron Spencer Fogleman
Chapter 14. First Partition: The Troubled Origins of the Mason-Dixon Line
—Edward G. Gray
Chapter 15. The Power to Be Reborn
—David S. Shields
Conclusion. Beyond the Rebirth of the Revolution: Coming to Terms with
Coming of Age
—Michael Zuckerman
Notes
List of Contributors
Index
Acknowledgments
—Patrick Spero
PART I. CIVIL WARS: CHALLENGING THE PATRIOTIC NARRATIVE
Chapter 1. War Stories: Remembering and Forgetting the American Revolution
—Michael A. McDonnell
Chapter 2. The Intimacies of Occupation: Loyalties, Compromise, and
Betrayal in Revolutionary-Era Newport
—Travis Glasson
Chapter 3. Uncommon Cause: The Challenges of Disaffection in Revolutionary
Pennsylvania
—Aaron Sullivan
Chapter 4. Loyalism, Citizenship, American Identity: The Shoemaker Family
—Kimberly Nath
Chapter 5. "Executioners of Their Friends and Brethren": Naval Impressment
as an Atlantic Civil War
—Denver Brunsman
PART II. WIDER HORIZONS: DECENTERING THE NATIONALISTIC NARRATIVE
Chapter 6. British Union and American Revolution: Imperial Authoritye and
the Multinational State
—Ned C. Landsman
Chapter 7. Revisiting the Bishop Controversy
—Katherine Carté Engel
Chapter 8. Empire's Vital Extremities: British Africa and the Coming of the
American Revolution
—Bryan Rosenblithe
Chapter 9. The Great Awakening, Presbyterian Education, and the
Mobilization of Power in the Revolutionary Mid- Atlantic
—Mark Boonshoft
PART III. NEW DIRECTIONS
Chapter 10. "This Is the Skin of a Whit[e] Man": Material Memories of
Violence in Sullivan's Campaign
—Zara Anishanslin
Chapter 11. Environmental History and the War of Independence: Saltpeter
and the Continental Army's Shortage of Gunpowder
—David C. Hsiung
Chapter 12. The Problem of Order and the Transfer of Slave Property in the
Revolutionary South
—Matthew Spooner
PART IV. LEGACIES: THE AFTERLIFE OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION
Chapter 13. The United States and the Transformation of Transatlantic
Migration During the Age of Revolution and Emancipation
—Aaron Spencer Fogleman
Chapter 14. First Partition: The Troubled Origins of the Mason-Dixon Line
—Edward G. Gray
Chapter 15. The Power to Be Reborn
—David S. Shields
Conclusion. Beyond the Rebirth of the Revolution: Coming to Terms with
Coming of Age
—Michael Zuckerman
Notes
List of Contributors
Index
Acknowledgments