51 research outputs found
Streynsham Master's office: accounting for collectivity, order and authority in 17th-century India
This paper examines the uses of writing in early modern global trade in order to argue for the constitutive role of inscription practices in the making of the social and spatial relations of mercantile capitalism. At the heart of this is a detailed study of the reform of the accounting and bookkeeping practices of the English East India Company at Fort St George carried out by Streynsham Master (1640–1724) in the late 17th century. This is used to show that the collective decision-making, social and moral order, and relationships of respect upon which the Company relied were constructed in and through the factory's consultation books, accountancy ledgers and the letters sent between England and India. This paperwork was part of the making of institutional structures and spaces which worked through a series of divisions between ‘public’ and ‘private’, and which made the ‘logic’ of mercantile capital evident to the Company's servants
Evaluating the effectiveness of agricultural adaptation to climate change in preindustrial society
The effectiveness of agricultural adaptation determines the vulnerability of this sector to climate change, particularly during the preindustrial era. However, this effectiveness has rarely been quantitatively evaluated, specifically at a large spatial and long-term scale. The present study covers this case of preindustrial society in AD 1500–1800. Given the absence of technological innovations in this time frame, agricultural production was chiefly augmented by cultivating more land (land input) and increasing labor input per land unit (labor input). Accordingly, these two methods are quantitatively examined. Statistical results show that within the study scale, land input is a more effective approach of mitigating climatic impact than labor input. Nonetheless, these observations collectively improve Boserup's theory from the perspective of a large spatial and long-term scale.postprin
Maya Jasanoff. Edge of Empire: Lives, Culture, and Conquest in the East, 1750–1850. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2005. Pp. 404. $27.95 (cloth).
Book review: Colonial lives across the British Empire: imperial careering in the long nineteenth century. Edited by David Lambert and Alan Lester. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 2006. xvi + 376 pp. £60.00 cloth. ISBN 9780816644131
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Discipline, government and law : the response to crime, poverty and prostitution in nineteenth century Portsmouth
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