This third volume focuses on the Atlantic world, detailing the factors driving globalization and the development, spread, and growth of knowledge and technology—but with a continuous focus on the effect of the maritime environment on how specific knowledge and technologies developed ... This work is a valuable addition to scholarship on the Atlantic world and globalization studies.
CHOICE
The study is based on a broad source [of] literature base and stands out positively from the work of numerous Anglo-Saxon historians ... <i>Global Ocean of Knowledge</i> is an excellent overview and reference work for all those interested in the history of ... the Atlantic world.
Zeitschrift fur Historische Forschung (Bloomsbury Translation)
Karel Davids has written a landmark book about globalization, maritime history, knowledge making, and the experience of Europeans at sea.
James E. McClellan III, Professor Emeritus, Stevens Institute of Technology, USA
‘I am impressed by the ambition, breadth of coverage and scholarly depth of the work, and welcome the specific aim of instilling a long overdue maritime element into the wider literature on globalization, global history and Atlantic history. Reading the introduction and conclusion before delving into the core six chapters, the historiographical contribution and argument of the book are well laid out and persuasive.’
David J Starkey, Wilson Family Professor of Maritime History, University of Hull, UK
'[This is] an excellent manuscript by an outstanding scholar about the creation, development, reproduction and adaptation of knowledge across the Atlantic Ocean and how that affected its adjacent spaces. The subject of the book is outstandingly framed by a broad historiographical debate that brings together multiple strands of up-to-date research and excellent consideration of the development of those diverse debates over time. This positioning of the manuscript in such a broad historiographical context makes it attractive to students, specialists and a broad range of historians and educated readers’
Catia Antunes, Professor of History of Global Economic Networks, Leiden University, The Netherlands
Bringing to bear his masterful understanding of ways knowledge about all aspects of the sea grew, Karel Davids shows how that understanding shaped and was shaped by the forces of globalisation in lands bordering the Atlantic, in the process revealing the complex interplay of varied mechanisms, personal and institutional, which helped people conquer the ocean and creating a book undoubtedly worth reading.
Richard W. Unger, Professor Emeritus, University of British Columbia, Canada
The striking advances in the capability to collect and share maritime knowledge during the 18th century are cogently and elegantly analysed by Karel Davids in this comprehensive and well-argued volume on the Atlantic world. Using a transnational and cross-disciplinary approach, he moves with agility across different national historiographies and approaches and delivers his important analysis with a lightness of touch and a clarity of exposition and argument which will grip readers’ attention.
Maria Fusaro, Professor of Social and Economic History, University of Exeter, UK