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A global history of gold rushes / edited by Benjamin Mountford and Stephen Tuffnell.

LIBRA F865 .G59 2018
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Format:
Book
Contributor:
Mountford, Benjamin, 1980- editor.
Tuffnell, Stephen, 1987- editor.
Series:
California world history library ; 25.
California world history library ; 25
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Gold mines and mining--Social aspects.
Gold mines and mining.
History.
Social aspects.
California--Gold discoveries.
California.
Gold mines and mining--Social aspects--California.
California--History--1846-1850--Social aspects.
Genre:
History.
Physical Description:
xix, 323 pages ; 23 cm.
Place of Publication:
Oakland, California : University of California Press, [2018]
Summary:
"Nothing set the world in motion like gold. Gold rushes accelerated the global circulation of people, goods, capital, and technologies that transformed settler societies around the world. Yet, they are rarely considered in a global perspective. While in the past national histories have emphasized the role of gold rushes as accelerants of state formation, crucibles of national character, and watersheds of political development, the essays in Gold Rush begin from a different premise. They explore gold rushes as connected phenomena and emphasize the destructive power of the search for gold on indigenous communities and the environment, and their role as incubators of racial hierarchy and immigration restriction. The essays in Gold Rush showcase the best and most current research methodologies in global history - comparative, environmental, and transnational - to address these concerns. Gold Rush uses diverse themes and places as vantage points on the nineteenth century gold rushes - from the catalytic effect of the discovery of California placer gold in 1848 to the nostalgic rush to the beaches of Nome, Alaska, fifty years later; from anxious commentators discussing the public good and disorder of gold mining in Georgia, California, and Victoria to the worldwide discussion of the "Chinese Question" and the productivity of non-white labor in Africa; from the assertion of corporate control over lode mining to the destructive environmental and financial consequences of that control. At the heart of this book is the paradoxical power of gold rushes to connect and divide, to enrich and impoverish, to create and destroy"--Provided by publisher.
Contents:
Global transformations in the age of gold
Settler societies and gold rush democracy
Finance, speculation, and the economics of gold rushes
Expertise, the environment, and mining technologies.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Other Format:
Online version: Global history of gold rushes.
ISBN:
9780520294554
0520294556
9780520294547
0520294548
OCLC:
1029665628

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