Freshly Printed - allow 6 days lead
Islanders and Empire
Smuggling and Political Defiance in Hispaniola, 1580–1690
A pioneering examination of the role smuggling played in the transformation of Spanish Caribbean society and culture in the seventeenth century.
Juan José Ponce Vázquez (Author)
9781108702485, Cambridge University Press
Paperback / softback, published 18 November 2021
324 pages
22.9 x 15.2 x 1.9 cm, 0.48 kg
'… draw[s] attention to important yet understudied periods of Haiti's history.' Crystal Eddins, Haiti's New Political Worlds
Islanders and Empire examines the role smuggling played in the cultural, economic, and socio-political transformation of Hispaniola from the late sixteenth to seventeenth centuries. With a rare focus on local peoples and communities, the book analyzes how residents of Hispaniola actively negotiated and transformed the meaning and reach of imperial bureaucracies and institutions for their own benefit. By co-opting the governing and judicial powers of local and imperial institutions on the island, residents could take advantage of, and even dominate, the contraband trade that reached the island's shores. In doing so, they altered the course of the European inter-imperial struggles in the Caribbean by limiting, redirecting, or suppressing the Spanish crown's policies, thus taking control of their destinies and that of their neighbors in Hispaniola, other Spanish Caribbean territories, and the Spanish empire in the region.
List of Figures and Tables
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. Colonial Origins: Hispaniola in the Sixteenth Century
2. Smuggling, Sin, and Survival, 1580–1600
3. Repressing Smugglers: The Depopulations of Hispaniola, 1604–06
4. Tools of Colonial Power: Officeholders, Violence, and Enslaved African Exploitation in Santo Domingo's Cabildo
5. 'Prime Mover of All Machinations': Rodrigo Pimentel, Smuggling, and the Artifice of Power
6. Neighbors, Rivals, and Partners: Non-Spaniards and the Rise of Saint-Domingue
Conclusion
Glossary of Spanish Terms
Bibliography
Index
Subject Areas: Political activism [JPW], Hispanic & Latino studies [JFSL4], History of the Americas [HBJK]