The Oxford Handbook of the Seven Years' War
Edité par Trevor Burnard, Emma Hart et Marie Houllemare
The Oxford Handbook of the Seven Years’ War contains thirty-eight essays that provide up-to-date scholarship on all aspects of the globally important Seven Years’ War (1756–1763). The volume carefully examines the three major areas of conflict in the war—Europe, South Asia, and the Americas—treating each theatre as distinct from each other but often linked in ways that helped create a new geopolitics from the 1760s onward. Chapters trace the causes of the war in the interior of America; outline the triumphs of Britain and Prussia in fierce fighting across Europe; and explain how the British under the East India Company came to play an important role in South Asian politics and commerce. The Handbook pays due attention to military conflict but does much more than this. It investigates social, cultural, and intellectual developments in a crucial period of reorientation during the mid-eighteenth century. The Handbook is notably diverse in its authorship, with leading scholars on the Seven Years’ War from Europe and South Asia as well as Britain and North America, providing perspectives from many areas outside an Anglo-American frame. It treats the Seven Years’ War as a world-transformative event: not only important in its own right—in shaping commerce, politics, science, art, demography, religion, and gender during the conflict—but also central to the evolving history of South Asia, Europe, and the Americas in the second half of the eighteenth century.
Oxford University Press, juillet 2024
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