Maritime History and Identity

The Sea and Culture in the Modern World

Duncan Redford editor

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Published:27th Nov '13

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Maritime History and Identity cover

The sea and its relation to human life has always been a subject of fascination for historians. For the first time, this book looks at the field of Maritime History through the prism of identity - imperial, national, regional, gender and religious - from maritime great powers such as Britain, Germany and Japan, to smaller players.

The sea and its relation to human life has always been a subject of fascination for historians. For the first time, this book looks at the field of Maritime History through the prism of identity, looking at how the sea has influenced the formation of identity at a national, local and individual level from the early modern age to the present. It looks at a variety of people who interacted with the sea in different ways - from merchant sailors to naval officers and, on land, from dockworkers to the civilians who participated in the sea-based festivals in the Mediterranean port city of Messina. A cultural strand runs through the volume, with chapters focussing on the cultural construction of the 'naval hero' in literature, poetry, music and art, and an appraisal of the Japanese author and journalist It? Masanori, whose works had such a profound influence on Japan's post-World War II national identity. A key focus is the ways in which the Royal Navy influenced British identity at a national and regional level, but other countries with a strong naval tradition - such as Japan, Italy and Germany - are also analysed.
By bringing together a variety of themes related to identity, this book provides the first attempt to thoroughly analyse the ways in which maritime historians have engaged with the question of identity in recent years. In doing so, it provides an important and unique addition to the historiography, which will be essential reading for all scholars of maritime and naval history and those concerned with the question of identity.

'A commendably wide-ranging collection of case studies of the many ways in which the sea has framed individual and community perceptions of their identity since the sixteenth century. All who study cultural, social, and political history, as well as maritime specialists, should take them into account.' Michael Duffy, Centre for Maritime Historical Studies, University of Exeter 'Maritime History and Identity offers a wide-ranging treatment of an important topic. Much writing on cultural and social history has overlooked the maritime dimension to questions of identity; conversely, research into maritime history has all too often ignored these same questions. Covering subjects as diverse as British naval heroism, film portrayals of shipyard workers, the corporate identity of the Imperial German Navy and cross-dressing on cruise liners, this book addresses these imbalances in the scholarship. Structured thematically, and comprising fourteen essays by established up-and-coming authors, the volume will be of considerable interest to scholars and students of national and personal identities, maritime history and social and cultural history more generally.' Paul Readman, Senior Lecturer in Modern British History, King's College, London.

ISBN: 9781780763293

Dimensions: 146mm x 218mm x 34mm

Weight: 480g

352 pages