توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب Exploring the Dutch Empire: Agents, Networks and Institutions, 1600–2000
نام کتاب : Exploring the Dutch Empire: Agents, Networks and Institutions, 1600–2000
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : کاوش در امپراتوری هلند: عوامل، شبکه ها و نهادها، 1600-2000
سری :
نویسندگان : Catia Antunes, Jos Gommans (editors)
ناشر : Bloomsbury Academic
سال نشر : 2015
تعداد صفحات : 321
ISBN (شابک) : 9781474236423 , 9781474236430
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 2 مگابایت
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فهرست مطالب :
Cover page\nHalftitle page\nTitle page\nCopyright page\nCONTENTS\nCONTRIBUTORS\nPREFACE\nINTRODUCTION\n Exploring the Dutch Empire\n Agents, networks and institutions\n Notes\nPART ONE Agents\n CHAPTER ONE South Asian Cosmopolitanism and the Dutch Microcosms in Seventeenth-Century Cochin (Kerala) 1\n Introduction\n Cochin’s cosmopolitanism\n Van Goens and the morphology of Cochin\n Van Reede and the politics of Cochin\n South Asian cosmopolitanism and the Dutch microcosms\n Notes\n CHAPTER TWO Negotiating Foreignness in the Ottoman Empire: The Legal Complications of Cosmopolitanism in the Eighteenth Century\n Diplomatic networks: The Ottomans and the West\n Consular networks\n Defi ning foreignness\n The concept of ‘nation’\n Mixed marriages\n Conclusion\n Notes\n CHAPTER THREE Pioneering in Southeast Asia in the First Half of the Nineteenth Century\n Batavia, seat of government\n Piracy and commercial expansion\n A seafaring adventurer of great talents\n Concluding remarks\n Notes\n CHAPTER FOUR Nodal Ndola\n Notes\nPART TWO Networks\n CHAPTER FIVE The Networks of Dutch Brazil: Rise, Entanglement and Fall of a Colonial Dream\n Introduction\n The trading networks: The rise of a colonial dream\n Networks of power: Politics and governance in the Republic and Brazil\n Networks of infl uence: Lobbying for Brazil\n Afterthoughts\n Notes\n CHAPTER SIX Networks of Information: The Dutch East Indies\n Introduction\n Colonial archives as global systems of domination\n The Dutch colonial archive\n Exchange of letters\n Mail reports\n The telegraph\n Global communication\n Information practices at the local level\n From colonial to global\n The hadj\n The consulate in a ‘global network’\n Conclusions\n Notes\n CHAPTER SEVEN Paramaribo: Myriad Connections, Multiple Identifi cations 1\n Movement of people\n Flow of goods\n Exchange of ideas\n Conclusion\n Notes\n CHAPTER EIGHT The Global Dutchman in Indonesian Waters\n A multifaceted world of traders\n Agent of colonial state formation\n Dynamics of globalization\n A postcolonial epilogue\n Conclusion\n Notes\nPART THREE Institutions\n CHAPTER NINE ‘Not out of Love, but for Money and Profi t’ 1 : Dutch–Japanese Trade from the Seventeenth to the Nineteenth Century\n Introduction: A landlocked empire\n Policy discussions\n The move to Deshima\n The need for information\n Dutch perceptions\n Fūsetsu-gaki\n Conclusion\n Notes\n CHAPTER TEN Institutional Interaction on the Gold Coast: African and Dutch Institutional Cooperation in Elmina, 1600–1800\n Introduction\n Dutch institutions on the Gold Coast\n African institutions on the Gold Coast\n Military collaboration\n Law and order\n The role of middlemen\n Conclusion\n Notes\n CHAPTER ELEVEN Conflict Resolution, Social Control and Law-Making in Eighteenth-Century Dutch Sri Lanka\n Divided sovereignty and colonial enclaves\n Social control and law-making at work: Criminal justice\n Law-making and codifi cation of customary law\n Legal pluralism and travelling legal traditions\n Conflict resolution and consolidation of legitimacy\n Notes\n CHAPTER TWELVE Curaçao: Insular Nationalism vis-à-vis Dutch (Post)Colonialism\n The choice against sovereignty\n Curaçao, 1710\n Curaçao, 1810\n Curaçao, 1910\n Curaçao, 2010\n Dutch colonialism and Curaçaoan identity\n Conclusion\n Notes\n CONCLUSION Globalizing Empire: The Dutch Case\n Notes\nFURTHER READING\nINDEX