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Globalized Peripheries examines the commodity flows and financial
ties within Central and Eastern Europe in order to situate these
regions as important contributors to Atlantic trade networks. The
early modern Atlantic world, with its flows of bullion, of free and
unfree labourers, of colonial produce and of manufactures from
Europe and Asia, with mercantile networks and rent-seeking capital,
has to date been described almost entirely as the preserve of the
Western sea powers. More recent scholarship has rediscovered the
dense entanglements with Central and Eastern Europe. Globalized
Peripheries goes further by looking beyond slavery and American
plantations. Contributions look at the trading practices and
networks of merchants established in Central and Eastern Europe,
investigate commodity flows between these regions and the Atlantic
world, and explore the production of export commodities, two-way
migration as well as financial ties. The volume uncovers new
economic and financial connections between Prussia, the Habsburg
Empire, Russia, as well as northern and western Germany with the
Atlantic world. Its period coverage connects the end of the early
modern world with the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.
Contributors from the US, Britain and Europe explore a neglected
aspect of transatlantic slavery: the implication of a continental
European hinterland. Slavery Hinterland explores a neglected aspect
of transatlantic slavery: the implication of a continental European
hinterland. It focuses on historical actors in territories that
were not directly involved in the traffic inAfricans but linked in
various ways with the transatlantic slave business, the plantation
economies that it fed and the consequences of its abolition. The
volume unearths material entanglements of the Continental and
Atlantic economies and also proposes a new agenda for the
historical study of the relationship between business and morality.
Contributors from the US, Britain and continental Europe examine
the ways in which the slave economy touched on individual lives and
economic developments in German-speaking Europe, Switzerland,
Denmark and Italy. They reveal how these 'hinterlands' served as
suppliers of investment, labour and trade goods for the slave trade
and of materials for the plantation economies, and how involvement
in trade networks contributed in turn to key economic developments
in the 'hinterlands'. The chapters range in time from the first,
short-lived attempt at establishing a German slave-trading
operation in the 1680s to the involvement of textile manufacturers
in transatlantic trade in the first quarter of the nineteenth
century. A key theme of the volume is the question of conscience,
or awareness of being morally implicated in an immoral enterprise.
Evidence for subjective understandings of the moral challenge of
slavery is found in individual actions and statements and also in
post-abolition colonisation and missionary projects. FELIX BRAHM is
Research Fellow at the German Historical Institute in London. EVE
ROSENHAFT is Professor of German Historical Studies, University of
Liverpool. CONTRIBUTORS: Felix Brahm, Peter Haenger, Catherine
Hall, Daniel P. Hopkins, Craig Koslofsky, Sarah Lentz, Rebekka von
Mallinckrodt, Anne Sophie Overkamp, Alexandra Robinson, Eve
Rosenhaft, Anka Steffen, Klaus Weber, Roberto Zaugg
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