1st Edition

Piracy in World History

Edited By Stefan Amirell, Hans Hägerdal, Bruce Buchan Copyright 2022
290 Pages
by Routledge

290 Pages
by Routledge

In a modern global historical context, scholars have often regarded piracy as an essentially European concept which was inappropriately applied by the expanding European powers to the rest of the world, mainly for the purpose of furthering colonial forms of domination in the economic, political, military, legal and cultural spheres. By contrast, this edited volume highlights the relevance of both... Read more
Acknowledgements, 1 Introduction: Piracy in World History, 2 Publique Enemies to Mankind: International Pirates as a Product of International Politics, 3 All at Sea: Locke's Tyrants and the Pyrates of Political Thought, 4 The Colonial Origins of Theorizing Piracy's Relation to Failed States, 5 The Bugis-Makassar Seafarers: Pirates or Entrepreneurs?, 6 Piracy in India's Western Littoral: Reality and Representation, 7 Holy Warriors, Rebels, and Thieves: Defining Maritime Violence in the Ottoman Mediterranean, 8 Piracy, Empire, and Sovereignty in Late Imperial China, 9 Persistent Piracy in Philippine Waters: Metropolitan Discourses about Chinese, Dutch, Japanese, and Moro Coastal Threats, 1570-1800, 10 Sweden, Barbary Corsairs, and the Hostis Humani Generis: Justifying Piracy in European Political Thought, 11 Pirates of the Sea and the Land: Concurrent Vietnamese and French Concepts of Piracy during the Second Half of the Nineteenth Century, 12 Pirate Passages in Global History: Afterword

Biography

Stefan Eklöf Amirell is a professor of global history at Linnaeus University, Sweden, and the director of the Linnaeus University Centre for Concurrences in Colonial and Postcolonial Studies. His research focuses on colonial encounters and maritime violence during the long nineteenth century. Hans Hägerdal is a professor of history at Linnaeus University, Sweden. His major fields are East and Southeast Asian history, in particular focusing on early-modern colonial encounters and contact zones, historiographical questions, and the history of slaving. Bruce Buchan is an intellectual historian specializing in the intersection of colonization with the history of ideas in the late eighteenth century. He is an associate professor in the School of Humanities, Languages, and Social Sciences, at Griffith University in Brisbane, Australia.