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Zusatztext "This timely collection of essays by a range of literary and cultural historians deftly explores the multivalent and sometimes conflictive uses of violence in early modern England - a period for which violence was a natural but by no means a transparent form of social expression. Early modern violence spoke volumes but the particular story any one act of violence might tell depended on its various agents! participants! and audience living the historical moment. One ringing refrain of this volume! however! is that violence more often than not told the story of the tenuous nature of patriarchal authority in early modern England. " - Patricia Fumerton! Professor and Director! English Broadside Ballad Archive! Department of English! University of California-Santa Barbara Informationen zum Autor RANSFORD PALMER is Professor of Economics, Howard University, USA. Klappentext The book examines how globalization is altering the structure of the extremely foreign trade-dependent Caribbean economies. It treats these small economies together as a single economy by focusing on their common features. Zusammenfassung The book examines how globalization is altering the structure of the extremely foreign trade-dependent Caribbean economies. It treats these small economies together as a single economy by focusing on their common features. Inhaltsverzeichnis The Caribbean Economy The Decline of Traditional Exports Nontraditional Exports as the Frontier of Caribbean Development The Service Economy The Caribbean Service Economy Migration The Travel Economy Investment and Consumption The Role of Government Caribbean Economic Integration: Drifting Toward a Single Market and Economy Caribbean External Economic Relations Epilogue Appendix
Sommario
The Caribbean Economy The Decline of Traditional Exports Nontraditional Exports as the Frontier of Caribbean Development The Service Economy The Caribbean Service Economy Migration The Travel Economy Investment and Consumption The Role of Government Caribbean Economic Integration: Drifting Toward a Single Market and Economy Caribbean External Economic Relations Epilogue Appendix
Relazione
"This timely collection of essays by a range of literary and cultural historians deftly explores the multivalent and sometimes conflictive uses of violence in early modern England - a period for which violence was a natural but by no means a transparent form of social expression. Early modern violence spoke volumes but the particular story any one act of violence might tell depended on its various agents, participants, and audience living the historical moment. One ringing refrain of this volume, however, is that violence more often than not told the story of the tenuous nature of patriarchal authority in early modern England. " - Patricia Fumerton, Professor and Director, English Broadside Ballad Archive, Department of English, University of California-Santa Barbara