Ian K. Steele's pioneering work in imperial and early North American history was a pivotal contribution to the establishment of Atlantic history as a field. His study of a unified English - and later British - Atlantic challenged American exceptionalism and encouraged the current wave of interest in Atlantic studies.
Inspired by the major themes in Steele's scholarship, the original essays in English Atlantics Revisited examine British Atlantic contexts and political economy, as well as maritime, military, Amerindian, and social history. The contributors offer challenging new findings and perspectives as they revisit the English Atlantics: chapters on specific personalities, regions, and topics reveal the extent of transatlantic, cross-cultural, and trans-national interactions. English Atlantics Revisited help assess the current state of Atlantic history.
Contributors include Daniel A. Baugh (Cornell), Alexander V. Campbell (independent scholar), Michael Dove (Western Ontario), Randy Dunn (Western Ontario), Michelle A. Hamilton (Guelph), Richard R. Johnson (Washington), Margaret M.R. Kellow (Western Ontario), Neil Kennedy (Brock), Kenneth A. Lockridge (Montana), Stacy L. Lorenz (Alberta), Sara Morrison (Western Ontario), Barbara C. Murison (Western Ontario), John M. Murrin, (Princeton), David J. Norton (Western Ontario), Jon W. Parmenter (Cornell), Nancy L. Rhoden (Western Ontario), and John Shy (Michigan).
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