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Book Cover
E-book
Author Smith, Alan K.

Title CREATING A WORLD ECONOMY : merchant capital, colonialism, and world trade 1400-1825
Published [Place of publication not identified] : ROUTLEDGE, 2019

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Description 1 online resource (1 volume)
Contents Cover; Half Title; Title; Copyright; Contents; Preface; 1 INTRODUCTION; 2 THE WIDER WORLD; The Agricultural Base; Material Progress in the Wider World; Aborted Growth; Conclusion; 3 MEDIEVAL EUROPE; The Antecedents; Stability, Growth, and Catastrophe; Renewed Growth; Toward Modernity; Conclusion; 4 OVERSEAS EXPANSION AND DECLINE IN THE MEDITERRANEAN; Medieval Iberia; Expansion; Decline in the Mediterranean; Conclusion; 5 EUROPE IN TRANSITION: CAPITALISM; Before the Dutch Golden Age; The Golden Age; England in Transition; The Struggle for Control of England; 6 PERIPHERIES IN THE WORLD ECONOMY
Eastern EuropeThe Plantation Economies; Fueling the Plantation Economy; Conclusion; 7 DEPENDENCIES IN THE WORLD ECONOMY; Ireland; Transition in Spanish America; The North American Mainland; Conclusion; 8 THE COLONIAL POWERS AND THE WORLD ECONOMY IN THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY; England and World Trade; Colonial Europe Tries to Narrow the Gap; Rivalry; Conclusion; 9 REVOLUTION; Challenging the Old Order; The Industrial Revolution in Britain; Conclusion; 10 RETROSPECT AND PROSPECT; Retrospect; Prospect; Conclusion; Notes; Bibliography; About the Book and Author; Index
Summary This is an exploration in world history that examines complex and intriguing questions concerning the origins of the first truly global economy, centered in Europe, which served in turn as a solid basis for the later emergence of the modern world system. Professor Smith first examines the remarkable progress achieved by many cultures around the world, achievements that for some time far exceeded anything then found in Europe. The study then probes beyond "traditionalism" as a sufficient explanation of the inability of these societies to maintain the economic momentum that had begun so auspiciously and carefully examines the experience of European societies by way of comparison, finding that remarkably similar processes tended to unfold at first: regions of Europe that made the earliest gains in material progress were, like other parts of the world, unable to sustain these advances. Still, in some parts of Europe-particularly the Netherlands and England-a new alignment of social forces was yielding the social system that would eventually evolve into capitalism. This breakthrough allowed for continued dynamic material progress, particularly for the English. Able to establish an unprecedented commercial dominance in vast reaches of the world, the British found themselves at the hub of a new world economy much more complex than any earlier intercultural commercial system. The book delineates the systemic roles assumed by the various regions of the world and by European merchant capital and explains the tensions within this system that ensured its continued dynamism and eventual transformation into the current world economic system. Creating a World Economy combines an epic sweep with a mastery of historical detail and is sure to stimulate discussion among sociologists and historians interested in questions of a global nature
Notes Alan K. Smith is associate professor of history at Syracuse University
Print version record
Subject Commerce -- History.
International trade -- History
Economic history.
Capitalism -- History
Colonies -- History
HISTORY -- General.
Capitalism
Colonies
Commerce
Economic history
International trade
Genre/Form History
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9780429033810
0429033818
9780429690419
042969041X
9780429710421
0429710429
9780429730436
0429730438