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Republic and Empire : Crisis, Revolution, and America’s Early Independence [due16/9/25]

Burnard, Trevor; O'Shaughnessy, Andrew Jackson

Authors

Trevor Burnard

Andrew Jackson O'Shaughnessy



Abstract

At the time of the American Revolution (1765–83), the British Empire had colonies in India, Africa, the Caribbean, the Pacific, Canada, Ireland, and Scotland. The thirteen rebellious American colonies accounted for half of the total number of provinces in the British world after the Seven Years’ War. What of the loyal half? Why did some of Britain’s subjects feel so aggrieved that they wanted to establish a new system of government, while others did not rebel? In this authoritative history, Trevor Burnard and Andrew Jackson O’Shaughnessy show that understanding the long-term causes of the American Revolution requires a global view.
As much as it was an event in the history of the United States, the American Revolution was an imperial event produced by the upheavals of managing a far-flung set of imperial possessions during a turbulent period of reform. By looking beyond the familiar borders of the Revolution and considering colonies that did not rebel—Quebec, Nova Scotia, Bermuda, India, the British Caribbean, Senegal, and Ireland—Burnard and O’Shaughnessy go beyond the republican, liberal, and democratic aspects of the emerging American nation, providing a broader history that transcends what we think we know about the Revolution.

Citation

Burnard, T., & O'Shaughnessy, A. J. (in press). Republic and Empire : Crisis, Revolution, and America’s Early Independence [due16/9/25]. Yale University Press

Book Type Authored Book
Deposit Date May 30, 2024
Publisher Yale University Press
ISBN 9780300280180
Public URL https://hull-repository.worktribe.com/output/4677373
Publisher URL https://yalebooks.yale.edu/book/9780300280180/republic-and-empire/
Contract Date Mar 7, 2024