|
PUBLICATIONS
Current GR Issue
Recent GR Issues
Subscribe
to the GR
April 1999 Issue
Instructions for Authors
Contact the GR Editor
About the Geographical Review
Search the GR Index
FOCUS on Geography
Magazine
Ubique
Maps,
Atlases, and Books

|
The Geographical Review
April 1999, Vol. 89 (1), pp. 225-236
SPECIAL ISSUE - OCEANS CONNECT
EARLY MODERN EXPANSION AND THE POLITICIZATION OF OCEANIC SPACE
Elizabeth Mancke
Keywords: colonialism, European expansion, imperialism, international relations.
ABSTRACT:
The definition of oceans as international politicized space is an integral but little analyzed aspect of early modern European expansion, which took
place between about 1450 and 1800. In this essay I explore the implications of thinking about the development of European imperialism and global dominance in
oceanic terms. I argue that oceanic, rather than terrestrial, dominance characterized early modern European empires, particularly in relation to Africa and Asia,
where indigenous political and economic control prevailed. The long apprenticeship in mastering oceanic space contributed to the ability of Europeans to build
land-based empires in Asia and Africa in the nineteenth century. As well, the international relationships worked out by Europeans in the nonstate but militarized
arena of the high seas contributed to an emergent global order.
|