Publication subTitle :Communications and the State in the French Atlantic, 1713-1763
Author: Banks Kenneth J.
Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
Publication year: 2002
E-ISBN: 9780773570641
P-ISBN(Paperback): 9780773524446
Subject: K565.3 The history of the Middle Ages (486 - 1789).
Keyword: 非洲史
Language: ENG
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Description
Drawing on a vast array of official correspondence, merchant's letters, ship's logs, and graphic material from archives and research libraries in Canada, France, and the United States, Kenneth Banks details how France, as the most powerful nation on the Continent and possessing a tradition of maritime interest in the Americas and West Africa dating back to the earliest years of the sixteenth century, seemed destined to take a leading role in exploiting and settling the Americas and establishing posts in West Africa. That it largely failed to do so can be explained in large part by problems emanating from information exchange in an early modern authoritarian state. Banks provides a historical context for the role of communications in the development of the imperial nation-state and offers an Atlantic World perspective on the growing body of literature revising the historical role of absolutism.