James Stripes’s Reviews > The Shaping of America: A Geographical Perspective on 500 Years of History, Volume 1: Atlantic America 1492-1800 > Status Update
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James Stripes
is on page 257 of 524
My current interest in this book stems from its value to the development of the emerging field of Atlantic History. After the first part (3-76), however, it seems too focused on North America. While it does a good job of reframing United States national histories, it offers too little concerning Central and South America, to say nothing of Africa and Europe, for my present needs.
— May 30, 2014 10:12AM
James Stripes
is on page 172 of 524
My current interest in this book stems from its value to the development of the emerging field of Atlantic History. After the first part (3-76), however, it seems too focused on North America. While it does a good job of reframing United States national histories, it offers too little concerning Central and South America, to say nothing of Africa and Europe, for my present needs.
— May 28, 2014 07:59AM
James Stripes
is on page 131 of 524
My current interest in this book stems from its value to the development of the emerging field of Atlantic History. After the first part (3-76), however, it seems too focused on North America. While it does a good job of reframing United States national histories, it offers too little concerning Central and South America, to say nothing of Africa and Europe, for my present needs.
— May 13, 2014 07:22AM
James Stripes
is on page 40 of 524
Although claiming to offer a geographer's perspective, Meinig seems to be focused of patterns of institutions. Seafaring, conquest, and planting of colonies is the sequence. The Portuguese are strong in seafaring, as are the English. Ireland offered some practice in conquest that facilitated colonization in the New World by the English. But the Spanish Reconquest equipped the Spanish better for New World enterprises.
— Jan 15, 2014 08:11PM
