From Captives to Consuls

From Captives to Consuls
Author: Brett Goodin
Publisher: JHU Press
Total Pages: 225
Release: 2020-10-13
Genre: History
ISBN: 1421438984


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How three white, non-elite American sailors turned their experiences of captivity into diverse career opportunities—and influenced America's physical, commercial, ideological, and diplomatic development. Winner of the John Lyman Book Award by the North American Society for Oceanic History From 1784 to 1815, hundreds of American sailors were held as "white slaves" in the North African Barbary States. In From Captives to Consuls, Brett Goodin vividly traces the lives of three of these men—Richard O'Brien, James Cathcart, and James Riley—from the Atlantic coast during the American Revolution to North Africa, from Philadelphia to the Louisiana Territories, and finally to the western frontier. This first scholarly biography of American captives in Barbary sifts through their highly curated writings to reveal how ordinary individuals in extraordinary circumstances could maneuver through and contribute to nation building in early America, all the while advancing their own interests. The three subjects of this collective biography both reflected and helped refine evolving American concepts of liberty, identity, race, masculinity, and nationhood. Time and again, Goodin reveals, O'Brien, Cathcart, and Riley uncovered opportunities in their adversity. They variously found advantage first in the Revolution as privateers, then in captivity by writing bestselling captivity narratives and successfully framing their ordeal as a qualification for coveted government employment. They even used their modest fame as ex-captives to become diplomats, get elected to state legislatures, and survey the nation's territorial expansions in the South and West. Their successful self-interested pursuit of opportunities offered by the expanding American empire, Goodin argues, constitutes what he calls "the invisible hand of American nation building." Goodin shows how these ordinary men, lacking the genius of a Benjamin Franklin or Alexander Hamilton, depended on sheer luck and adaptability in their quest for financial independence and public recognition. Drawing on archival collections, newspapers, private correspondence, and government documents, From Captives to Consuls sheds new light on the significance of ordinary individuals in guiding early American ideas of science, international relations, and what it meant to be a self-made man.


From Captives to Consuls
Language: en
Pages: 225
Authors: Brett Goodin
Categories: History
Type: BOOK - Published: 2020-10-13 - Publisher: JHU Press

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How three white, non-elite American sailors turned their experiences of captivity into diverse career opportunities—and influenced America's physical, commerc
From Captives to Consuls
Language: en
Pages: 225
Authors: Brett Goodin
Categories: History
Type: BOOK - Published: 2020-10-13 - Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press

GET EBOOK

Drawing on archival collections, newspapers, private correspondence, and government documents, From Captives to Consuls sheds new light on the significance of o
Consuls and Captives
Language: en
Pages: 259
Authors: Erica Heinsen-Roach
Categories: History
Type: BOOK - Published: 2019 - Publisher: Changing Perspectives on Early

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Analyzes how negotiations between Dutch consuls and North African rulers over the liberation of Dutch sailors helped create a new diplomatic order in the wester
The American Captives in Havana
Language: en
Pages: 38
Authors: Ferdinand Clark
Categories: Consuls
Type: BOOK - Published: 1841 - Publisher:

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Captives and Countrymen
Language: en
Pages: 269
Authors: Lawrence A. Peskin
Categories: History
Type: BOOK - Published: 2009-03-23 - Publisher: JHU Press

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Intro -- Contents -- Preface -- Introduction -- PART 1 CAPTIVITY AND THE PUBLIC SPHERE -- 1 Captivity and Communications -- 2 The Captives Write Home -- 3 Publi