Much has been written about the forging of a British identity in the
seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. The process, unconfined to the
British Isles, ran across the Irish Sea and Atlantic Ocean and was
played out in North America and the Caribbean. The identities of Irish
Catholics or Highland Scots who took part in the imperial venture abroad
were subject to constant renegotiation. In the process, the indigenous
peoples of North America, the Caribbean, the Cape, Australia, and New
Zealand were forced to redefine their own identities. Although the
encounter was far from equal, it was by no means simple or monolithic
This collection explores the many complex ways in which identities were
forged within Britain and among indigenous peoples through a process of
collision and compromise. Contributions from Africa, Australia, and both
sides of the Atlantic deal with different aspects of these
encounters-for example, Native Americans and Early Modern Concepts of
Race and Hunting and the Politics of Masculinity in Cherokee
Treaty-making, 1763-1775. Empire and Others provides a valuable study
that will be of particular interest to students of Colonial American
history and early modern British history.
Contributors to the volume include Philip Morgan, Christopher Bayly,
Andrew Porter, Hilary Beckles, and Peter Way.