The Ordeal of Elizabeth Marsh: How a Remarkable Woman Crossed Seas and Empires to Become Part of World History

The Ordeal of Elizabeth Marsh: How a Remarkable Woman Crossed Seas and Empires to Become Part of World History

by Linda Colley (Author)

Synopsis

From the author of 'Britons', the story of the exceptional life of the intrepid Elizabeth Marsh - an extraordinary woman of her time who was caught up in trade, imperialism, war, exploration, migration, growing maritime reach, and new ideas. Linda Colley's new book breaks the boundaries between biography, family stories and global history. This is a book about a world in a life. An individual lost to history, Elizabeth Marsh (1735-85) travelled farther, and was more intimately affected by developments across the globe, than the vast majority of men. Conceived in Jamaica and possibly mixed-race, she was the first woman to publish in English on Morocco, and the first to carry out extensive overland explorations in eastern and southern India, journeying in each case in close companionship with an unmarried man. She spent time in some of the world's biggest ports and naval bases, Portsmouth, Menorca, Gibraltar, London, Rio de Janeiro, Calcutta and the Cape. She was damaged by the Seven Years War and the American Revolutionary War; and linked through her own migrations with voyages of circumnavigation, and as victim and owner, she was involved in three different systems of slavery. But hers is a broadly revealing, not simply an exceptional, life. Marsh's links to the Royal Navy, the East India Company, empire and international trade made these experiences possible. To this extent, her career illumines shifting patterns of British and Western power and overseas aggression. The swift onset of globalization occurring in her lifetime also ensured that her progress, relationships and beliefs were repeatedly shaped and deflected by people and events beyond Europe. While imperial players like Edmund Burke and Eyre Coote form a part of her story, so do African slave sailors, skilled Indian weavers and astronomers, ubiquitous Sephardi Jewish traders, and the great Moroccan Sultan, Sidi Muhammad, who schemed to entrap her. Many modern biographies remain constrained by a national framework, while global histories are generally impersonal. By contrast, in this dazzling and original book, Linda Colley moves repeatedly and questioningly between vast geo-political transformations and the intricate detail of individual lives. This is a global biography for our globalizing times.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 417
Edition: New edition
Publisher: William The 4th
Published: 19 May 2008

ISBN 10: 0007192193
ISBN 13: 9780007192199

Media Reviews

'This is a remarkable book, both for its contents and because it is a new species of biography...Linda Colley has written a full-blown economic romance with an extraordinary range...bringing all the resources of her skills as a historian
and researcher to her story. It is a major achievement and an enthralling narrative.' Guardian

`Compelling...exhilarating...as a work of big history illustrated with brilliant minatures it is a triumph.' Sunday Times

'Stimulating and impressive...this is a remarkable life.' Financial Times

`This excellent biography reads like an eighteenth century picaresque novel'. Daily Telegraph

Observer; 'A brilliant illumination of women's lives in Britain during its first imperial century... Colley liberates the humanity of Elizabeth's story and makes it sing for the modern reader'.

`A minor miracle of biographical reconstruction...a fine historian.' Sunday Telegraph

Author Bio

One of the most distinguished, incisive and original British historians at work today, Linda Colley has taught and written on both sides of the Atlantic. She is currently Shelby M. C. Davis 1958 Professor of History at Princeton University. A Fellow of the British Academy, her previous books include: `In Defiance of Oligarchy: The Tory Party 1714-1760', `Namier', `Britons: Forging the Nation 1707-1837', which won the Wolfson Prize, and `Captives: Britain, Empire and the World 1600-1850'. In addition, she writes regularly for the Guardian, the New York Review of Books, and The Nation, has served on the Board of the British Library, and has delivered lectures and seminars for Amnesty International, the British Council, the European Union, the Nehru Foundation, the US State Department, and 10 Downing Street.