Rethinking the Age of Revolution
Published by Routledge, 2017: Rethinking the Age of Revolution, edited by Michael A. McDonnell.
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About the Book:
With contributions from: Pepijn Brandon (Vrije University), Karwan Fatah-Black (Leiden University), Forrest Hylton (Northwestern University), Pernille Røge (University of Pittsburgh), Sinclair Thomson (New York University), Peter Way (University of Windsor).
In the last twenty years, scholars have rushed to re-examine revolutionary experiences across the Atlantic, through the Americas, and, more recently, in imperial and global contexts. While Revolution has been a perennial favourite topic of national historians, a new generation of historians has begun to eschew traditional foundation narratives and embrace the insights of Atlantic and transnational history to re-examine what is increasingly called ‘the Age of Revolution’. This volume raises important questions about this new turn, and contributors pay particular attention to the hidden peoples and forces at work in this Revolutionary world. From Indian insurgents in Columbia and the Andes, to the terror exercised on the sailors and soldiers of imperial armies, and from Dutch radicals to Senegalese chiefs, these contributions reveal a new social history of the Age of Revolution that has sometimes been deliberately obscured from view.
This book was originally published as a special issue of Atlantic Studies.