The Atlantic EnlightenmentSusan Manning, Francis D. Cogliano Ashgate Publishing, Ltd., 2008 - 209 Seiten As the essays in this book cumulatively demonstrate, the Atlantic Enlightenment is not a compound product of modern scholarship, but a framework intrinsic to the articulation of the modern world as it was perceived and described by the major figures of the 18th-century world. |
Inhalt
Enlightenment Historiography and Cultural Civil Wars | 19 |
Where was the Atlantic Enlightenment? Questions of Geography 377 | 37 |
John Witherspoon and the Transatlantic Enlightenment | 61 |
David Hume and the Seagods of the Atlantic | 81 |
The Atlantic Enlightenment and German Responses to the | 97 |
Don Quixote and the Fictions of | 113 |
Transatlantic Sentiments and the | 131 |
Adam Smith and the Crisis of the American Union | 149 |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Adam Smith American Revolution argued Atlantic Enlightenment Atlantic History Atlantic world Bernard Bailyn Boston Britain British Brown Calvinist Cambridge Charles Charles W. J. Withers colonies colonists commerce Constitution context cultural David Hume Don Quixote Early Edinburgh eighteenth century empire England English essay Europe European example fiction France Franklin free trade geographical German Gilje Gulf Stream Harrington Harriot Henry historians human Hume's Ibid ideas imagination imperial independence intellectual interest J. G. A. Pocock James John Witherspoon Johnson Jonathan Letters liberty literary literature London Madison Maritime Modern Moral Philosophy narrative natural Nordamerika North novel Ocean Oxford Paul Philadelphia Political Discourses political economy Power of Sympathy Princeton question religious Republic republican Revolutionary Romantic sailors Samuel Schmohl Science Scotland Scottish Enlightenment seamen sentimental ships slave slavery social society space Sterne Sterne's theory Thomas Jefferson transatlantic Union University Press Wealth of Nations William writing wrote York