Forming Nations, Reforming Empires. Atlantic Polities in the long 18th Century

Forming Nations, Reforming Empires. Atlantic Polities in the long 18th Century

Organizer
Dr. Karen Kupperman, Department of History, New York University
Venue
Ireland House - New York University
Location
New York
Country
United States
From - Until
26.02.2010 - 27.02.2010
Website
By
Kupperman, Karen

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Programm

Friday, February 26th

11:00 am – 1:00 pm: Registration at Ireland House
1:00 – 1:30: Welcome – Dr. Karen Kupperman (NYU)

1:30 – 3:30: Panel 1: Migration, Emigration and Expulsion
Jeffrey Fortin (SUNY Oneonta) – "Unsettling of a nation is easy: the settling is not:" Removal and the construction of empire in the long eighteenth century
Mariana Perez (Universidad Nacional de General Sarmiento, Argentina) – How to Migrate to the River Plate: migratory strategies of low-income Spaniards during the last few decades of colonial times
Andrés Estefane (SUNY Stony Brook) – Scientific Expeditions, Territorial Disputes, and the Forging of a National Historiography: the case of Chile
Daniel Papsdorf (Wichita State University) – A Fluid Frontier: the Mississippi during the Revolutionary War

4:00 – 6:00: Keynote Address
Fredrika Teute (Omohundro Institute, College of William and Mary) - "Bliss was it in that dawn to be alive": love and abandon in the 1790s

Saturday, February 27

9:00 – 11:00: Panel 2: The Local in the Atlantic
Martha Few (University of Arizona) – The Fetus as Colonial Subject: gender, race, and reproduction in the eighteenth-century Spanish Atlantic
Liza Gijanto (Syracuse University) – Commerce, authority, and consumption in Niumi, the Gambia, during the height of the Atlantic trade
James Coltrain (Northwestern University) – Fuerte Real: The Castillo San Marcos and provincial identity in the Atlantic world
Steve Lenik (Syracuse University) – Moving Beyond the Mission in Frontiers and Borderlands: A Jesuit plantation and church within the cultural landscape of Grand Bay Quarter, Dominica, West Indies, 1748-1763

11:15 – 1:15: Panel 3: Negotiating Interstitial Power
Ross Newton (Northeastern University) – Networking and Empire: politics and territorial sovereignty in the Bay of Honduras
Adrian Finucane (Harvard University) – Anglo-Spanish Imperial Interaction in the Caribbean, 1713-1739
Christopher Ebert (CUNY Brooklyn College) – Maintaining Exclusion: British trade with Brazil after the War of the Spanish Succession: 1714-1750.
Luis Granados (University of Chicago) – Crust and Crumb of the U.S.-Mexican War

2:15 – 4:15: Panel 4: Mechanisms of Imperial Control
Karen Racine (University of Guelph) – Coded Anti-colonialism: The use (and misuse) of Napoleon in the rhetoric and practice of late colonial Spanish American patriotism, 1808-1814
Elena Schneider (Princeton) – British Occupation and the Limits of Imperial Sovereignty in 18th-century Havana
Pernille Røge (Oxford) – Danish, British and French colonial experimentation on the West African Coast, 1780s - 1790s
Akin Ogundiran (UNC Charlotte) – Political Economy and Cultural Works of the Old Oyo Empire

4:30 – 5:30: Closing Roundtable
States, Nations, Empires and Polities in the Long 18th Century
Jerusha Westbury (NYU), Anelise Shrout (NYU)

Contact (announcement)

Dr. Karen Kupperman
Department of History
New York University
Email: karen.kupperman@nyu.edu


Editors Information
Published on
20.11.2009
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Language(s) of event
English
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