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The Genesis of Rebellion
Governance, Grievance, and Mutiny in the Age of Sail
Reveals how poor governance and everyday forms of organization resulted in mutiny amongst seamen during the Age of Sail.
Steven Pfaff (Author), Michael Hechter (Author)
9781107193734, Cambridge University Press
Hardback, published 3 September 2020
352 pages
23.5 x 16 x 2.6 cm, 0.68 kg
'The book is a masterful analysis of mutiny in the British Royal Navy, relying on decades of ships' logs and navy records to identify two factors - grievances and governance - that explain why some ships experienced mutiny and others did not. Pfaff and Hechter provide theoretical insights with contemporary relevance for understanding rebellion and other collective threats to social order.' Christine Horne, Washington State University
The Age of Sail has long fascinated readers, writers, and the general public. Herman Melville, Joseph Conrad, Jack London et al. treated ships at sea as microcosms; Petri dishes in which larger themes of authority, conflict and order emerge. In this fascinating book, Pfaff and Hechter explore mutiny as a manifestation of collective action and contentious politics. The authors use narrative evidence and statistical analysis to trace the processes by which governance failed, social order decayed, and seamen mobilized. Their findings highlight the complexities of governance, showing that it was not mere deprivation, but how seamen interpreted that deprivation, which stoked the grievances that motivated rebellion. Using the Age of Sail as a lens to examine topics still relevant today - what motivates people to rebel against deprivation and poor governance - The Genesis of Rebellion: Governance, Grievance, and Mutiny in the Age of Sail helps us understand the emergence of populism and rejection of the establishment.
1. The genesis of rebellion
2. Governance and social order in the Age of Sail
3. One and all: the anatomy of mutiny
4. Why seamen rebelled: the causes of mutiny
5. Insurgency and solidarity: the mass mutinies at Spithead and the Nore
6. Discipline, punishment and the fear of insurrection
7. The consequences of mutiny
8. Conclusion and implications.
Subject Areas: Political science & theory [JPA], Sociology [JHB], Military history [HBW], Revolutions, uprisings, rebellions [HBTV]