
Outlaws of the Atlantic Sailors, Pirates, and Motley Crews in the Age of Sail
by Rediker, MarcusBuy New
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Summary
In Outlaws of the Atlantic, award-winning historian Marcus Rediker turns maritime history upside down. He explores the dramatic world of maritime adventure, not from the perspective of admirals, merchants, and nation-states but from the viewpoint of commoners—sailors, slaves, indentured servants, pirates, and other outlaws from the late seventeenth to the early nineteenth century. Bringing together their seafaring experiences for the first time, Outlaws of the Atlantic is an unexpected and compelling peoples’ history of the “age of sail.”
With his signature bottom-up approach and insight, Rediker reveals how the “motley”—that is, multiethnic—crews were a driving force behind the American Revolution; that pirates, enslaved Africans, and other outlaws worked together to subvert capitalism; and that, in the era of the tall ship, outlaws challenged authority from below deck.
By bringing these marginal seafaring characters into the limelight, Rediker shows how maritime actors have shaped history that many have long regarded as national and landed. And by casting these rebels by sea as cosmopolitan workers of the world, he reminds us that to understand the rise of capitalism, globalization, and the formation of race and class, we must look to the sea.
Author Biography
Table of Contents
Prologue
ONE: The Sailor’s Yarn
TWO: Edward Barlow, “Poor Seaman”
THREE: Henry Pitman, “Fugitive Traitor”
FOUR: Under the Banner of King Death: Pirates
FIVE: A Motley Crew in the American Revolution
SIX: African Rebels: From Captives to Shipmates
SEVEN: “Black Pirates”: The Amistad Rebellion, 1839
Epilogue
Acknowledgments
Notes
Index
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