Introduction: The Ordering of Authority in the Colonial
Americas
—John Smolenski
PART I. NARRATING VIOLENCE AND LEGALITY
Introduction to Part I
1. Law's Wilderness: The Discourse of English Colonizing, the
Violence of Intrusion, and the Failures of American History
—Christopher Tomlins
2. Dialogical Encounters in a Space of Death
—Richard Price
PART II. AUTHORITY AND INTIMATE VIOLENCE
Introduction to Part II
3. The Authority of Gender: Marital Discord and Social Order in
Colonial Quito
—Kimberly Gauderman
4. Private and State Violence Against African Slaves in Lower
Louisiana During the French Period, 1699-1769
—Cécile Vidal
5. Violence or Sex? Constructions of Rape and Race in Early
America
—Sharon Block
PART III. COLONIAL SPACE AND POWER
Introduction to Part III
6. The Murder of Jacob Rabe: Contesting Dutch Colonial Authority in
the Borderlands of Northeastern Brazil
—Mark Meuwese
7. Forging Cultures of Resistance on Two Colonial Frontiers:
Northwestern Mexico and Eastern Bolivia
—Cynthia Radding
8. Sorcery and Sovereignty: Senecas, Citizens, and the Contest for
Power and Authority on the Frontiers of the Early American
Republic
—Matthew Dennis
PART IV. RACE, CITIZENSHIP, AND COLONIAL IDENTITY
Introduction to Part IV
9. Early Modern Spanish Citizenship: Inclusion and Exclusion in the
Old and the New World
—Tamar Herzog
10. Natural Movements and Dangerous Spectacles: Beatings, Duels,
and "Play" in Saint Domingue
—Gene E. Ogle
11. Racial Passing: Informal and Official "Whiteness" in Colonial
Spanish America
—Ann Twinam
Afterword
—Thomas Humphrey
List of Abbreviations
Contributors
Acknowledgments
Index
John Smolenski teaches history at the University of California, Davis. Thomas J. Humphrey is Associate Professor of History at Cleveland State University and author of Land and Liberty: Hudson Valley Riots in the Age of Revolution.
"Fascinating case studies of how authority was both brutal yet precarious and malleable in the French, Spanish, English, and Dutch empires of the New World."--American Historical Review "This is an almost ideal anthology for graduate students and scholars still weighing the value of Atlantic-world scholarship. The essays are consistently strong and jargon-free. Editors and authors have produced a crisp, coherent, and readable volume whose case studies and arguments should stimulate discussion on the merits of the connecting themes rather than suffer cannibalization by specialists perusing only contributions from a particular geographic region."--Hispanic American Historical Review "This wide-ranging collection ... offers [a] compelling framework to connect the small triumphs and tragedies of daily life in colonial outposts with the grand plans of distant empire builders."--Journal of the Early Republic
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