2008
DOI: 10.1086/ahr.113.2.319
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An Age of Imperial Revolutions

Abstract: WHEN THE VENEZUELAN CREOLE FRANCISCO DE MIRANDA led an expeditionary force to the shores of his native land to liberate it from Spanish rule in the summer of 1806, he brought with him a new weapon for making revolutions: a printing press. He hoped that his band of white, black, and mulatto patriots would start a revolt to free a continent with an alliance of swords and ideas. After dawdling for ten days, Miranda learned that royal troops (also white, black, and mulatto) were marching from Caracas. He withdrew … Show more

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Cited by 125 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…37 The contingent and contested construction of sovereignty in overseas colonies paved the way for violent conquest not just in Latin America, Africa, and Asia, but also in land empires and borderlands on the Eurasian and North American continents. 38 The concept changed in the nineteenth century under the double influence of colonialism and nationalism, which made territoriality its defining feature and established the sovereign nation-state as a specifically European norm. 39 Unequal treaties between China and colonial powers, for instance, reshaped the Chinese state and treaty ports' ability to control everything from trade to laying telegraph lines, issues that historians of China have long discussed through the lens of sovereignty.…”
Section: Histories Of Sovereigntymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…37 The contingent and contested construction of sovereignty in overseas colonies paved the way for violent conquest not just in Latin America, Africa, and Asia, but also in land empires and borderlands on the Eurasian and North American continents. 38 The concept changed in the nineteenth century under the double influence of colonialism and nationalism, which made territoriality its defining feature and established the sovereign nation-state as a specifically European norm. 39 Unequal treaties between China and colonial powers, for instance, reshaped the Chinese state and treaty ports' ability to control everything from trade to laying telegraph lines, issues that historians of China have long discussed through the lens of sovereignty.…”
Section: Histories Of Sovereigntymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…An intersocietal approach to revolutions starts from a simple premise: Events that take place in one location are both affected by and affect events elsewhere. A number of transnational histories point to the ways revolutionary events contain an international dimension that supersedes the nation-state frame (e.g., Adelman 2008; Hunt 2010; Stone 2002). To take one example, the onset of the French Revolution cannot be understood without attention to the expansionist policies of the French state during the 17th and 18th centuries—between 1650 and 1780, France was at war in two out of every three years.…”
Section: Assessing Fourth-generation Approachesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…At the same time, although some of the descriptive components of an intersocietal approach can be found in transnational histories of revolution (e.g. Stone 2002;Armitage, 2007;Adelman 2008;Hunt 2010), the analytical dimensions of an intersocietal approach have not, as yet, been systematically interrogated. This paper has provided a first--cut at such an 15 A partial exception is the Marxist debate on uneven and combined development.…”
Section: The Promise Of An Intersocietal Approachmentioning
confidence: 99%