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Books > Humanities > History > Australasian & Pacific history > General
Irish people have had a long and complex engagement with the lands
and waters encompassing the Pacific world. As the European presence
in the Pacific intensified from the late eighteenth century, the
Irish entered this oceanic space as beachcombers, missionaries,
traders, and colonizers. During the nineteenth century, economic
distress in Ireland and rapid population growth on the Pacific
Ocean's eastern and western shores set in motion large-scale
migration that exerted a deep political, social, and economic
impact across the Pacific. Malcolm Campbell examines the rich
history of Irish experiences on land and at sea, offering new
perspectives on migration and mobility in the Pacific world and of
the Irish role in the establishment and maintenance of the British
Empire. This volume investigates the extensive transnational
connections that developed among Irish immigrants and their
descendants across this vast and unique oceanic space, ties that
illuminate how the Irish participated in the making of the Pacific
world and how the Pacific world made them.
Here Gananath Obeyesekere debunks one of the most enduring myths
of imperialism, civilization, and conquest: the notion that the
Western civilizer is a god to savages. Using shipboard journals and
logs kept by Captain James Cook and his officers, Obeyesekere
reveals the captain as both the self-conscious civilizer and as the
person who, his mission gone awry, becomes a "savage" himself.
In this new edition of "The Apotheosis of Captain Cook," the
author addresses, in a lengthy afterword, Marshall Sahlins's 1994
book, "How "Natives" Think," which was a direct response to this
work.
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