<&ldquo>"Connected Worlds: Communication Networks in the Colonial Southeast, 1513-1740" <&rdquo> is a study of the struggle to acquire and control information in a pre-postal, pre-printing press colonial world. This dissertation focuses on the period between 1513 and 1740 in the American Southeast. It argues that the acquisition and transmission of news was crucial to the creation, development and growth of colonial spaces. Secondly, this study examines the different groups and individuals who traversed and traded in the region, the routes that Spanish, English, French, Indian and African individuals followed and constructed, and the changing interpretations and values assigned to news. The dissertation addresses a simp...
This dissertation examines the literary repercussions of encounters between European, Native America...
Historians face the problem of how to write the history of the eighteenth-century British empire. Ho...
By exploring how colonists and enslaved folk migrated across island boundaries, manipulated imperial...
"Connected Worlds: Communication Networks in the Colonial Southeast, 1513-1740" is a study of the st...
This dissertation examines how news and information circulated among select colonies in the British ...
This dissertation is about knowledge, power, and identities in North America. It practices and deve...
This dissertation explores the nature of Indigenous influences on trade and diplomacy in proprietary...
"The traffic to the thirteen colonies, to the West Indies, and to Spanish America was so closely int...
In colonial North and South America, print was only one way of communicating. Information in various...
Nathaniel F. Holly reviews Alejandra Dubcovsky's Informed Power: Communication in the Early American...
The purpose of this dissertation is to examine the role played by merchants in the shaping of South ...
This dissertation reveals how, in the half-century following 1710, inhabitants of British and Spanis...
This study investigates the role played by the rivalry between English Carolina and Spanish Florida ...
This thesis examines the transatlantic networks of Scottish families who settled in North Carolina i...
1. East Indies -- 2. America. Discovery -- 3. Colonies and colonization. History -- 4. Commerce. His...
This dissertation examines the literary repercussions of encounters between European, Native America...
Historians face the problem of how to write the history of the eighteenth-century British empire. Ho...
By exploring how colonists and enslaved folk migrated across island boundaries, manipulated imperial...
"Connected Worlds: Communication Networks in the Colonial Southeast, 1513-1740" is a study of the st...
This dissertation examines how news and information circulated among select colonies in the British ...
This dissertation is about knowledge, power, and identities in North America. It practices and deve...
This dissertation explores the nature of Indigenous influences on trade and diplomacy in proprietary...
"The traffic to the thirteen colonies, to the West Indies, and to Spanish America was so closely int...
In colonial North and South America, print was only one way of communicating. Information in various...
Nathaniel F. Holly reviews Alejandra Dubcovsky's Informed Power: Communication in the Early American...
The purpose of this dissertation is to examine the role played by merchants in the shaping of South ...
This dissertation reveals how, in the half-century following 1710, inhabitants of British and Spanis...
This study investigates the role played by the rivalry between English Carolina and Spanish Florida ...
This thesis examines the transatlantic networks of Scottish families who settled in North Carolina i...
1. East Indies -- 2. America. Discovery -- 3. Colonies and colonization. History -- 4. Commerce. His...
This dissertation examines the literary repercussions of encounters between European, Native America...
Historians face the problem of how to write the history of the eighteenth-century British empire. Ho...
By exploring how colonists and enslaved folk migrated across island boundaries, manipulated imperial...