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  • Cited by 67
Publisher:
Cambridge University Press
Online publication date:
June 2012
Print publication year:
2005
Online ISBN:
9780511614873

Book description

The Discovery of Islands consists of a series of linked essays in British history, written by one of the world's leading historians of political thought and published over the past three decades. Its purpose is to present British history as that of several nations interacting with - and sometimes seceding from - an imperial state. The commentary presents this history as that of an archipelago, expanding across oceans to the Antipodes. Both New Zealand history and the author's New Zealand heritage inform this vision, presenting British history as oceanic and global, complementing (and occasionally criticising) the presentation of that history as European. Professor Pocock's interpretation of British history has been hugely influential in recent years, making The Discovery of Islands a resource of immense value for historians of Britain and the world.

Reviews

"This collection of essays will prove a valuable resource... (A)n engaging and thought provoking contribution to a growing body of work concerned with rethinking the meaning of British history"
Todd Webb, Canadian Journal of History

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Contents

Bibliographies
Publications by the present author, 1974–2004, in fields constituting british history
1974: ‘British history: a plea for a new subject’, New Zealand Journal of History, 8, 1, pp. 3–21 (Chapter 2 in present volume).
1975: Reprinted, with comments and a reply, Journal of Modern History, 47, 4, pp. 601–24.
1980: ‘Hume and the American Revolution: dying thoughts of a North Briton’, in Norton, David Fate, Capaldi, Nicholas and Robison, W. L. (eds.), McGill Hume Studies (San Diego: Austin Hills Press), pp. 325–43.
1982: ‘The limits and division of British history: in search of the unknown subject’, American Historical Review, 87, 2, pp. 311–36.
1983a: ‘Josiah Tucker on Burke, Locke and Price: a study in the varieties of eighteenth-century conservatism’, in Peters, Marie and others (eds.), Essays Presented to Professor N. C. Phillips (Christchurch: University of Canterbury), pp. 5–47.
1983b: ‘Outgrowing the hucksters: review of Keith Sinclair, A History of the University of Auckland’, New Zealand Journal of History, 17, 2, pp. 185–91.
1985: Virtue, Commerce and History: essays on political thought and history, chiefly in the eighteenth century (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press). (Items 1980 and 1983a reprinted.)
1987: ‘States, republics and empires: the American Founding in early-modern perspective’, Social Science Quarterly, 67, 4, pp. 703–23.
1988a: Reprinted in Ball, Terence and Pocock, J. G. A. (eds.), Conceptual Change and the Constitution (Lawrence, KS: University Press of Kansas), pp. 55–77.
1988b: ‘The fourth English Civil War: dissolution, desertion and alternative histories in the Glorious Revolution’, Government and Society, 23, 2, pp. 151–66.
1988c: The Politics of Extent and the Problems of Freedom (Colorado College Studies 25, Colorado Springs).
1991a: ‘The significance of 1688: some reflections on Whig history’, in Beddard, Robert (ed.), The Revolutions of 1688: the Andrew Browning Lectures, 1988 (Oxford: the Clarendon Press), pp. 271–92. (Chapter 8 in present volume.)
1991b: ‘Deconstructing Europe’, London Review of Books, 13, 19 December, pp. 6–10. (Chapter 15 in present volume.)
1991c: ‘Sicilian origins of Homer's Odyssey: Samuel Butler and Lewis Greville Pocock: the discovery of islands’ (The Press, Christchurch, 20 July 1991).
1992a: ‘Die Dekonstruction Europas’, Lettre Internationale, 16, pp. 15–21.
1992b: ‘Tangata whenua and Enlightenment anthropology’, New Zealand Journal of History, 26, 1, pp. 28–53. (Chapter 12 in present volume.)
1992c: Law, Sovereignty and History in a Divided Culture: the case of New Zealand and the Treaty of Waitangi (University of Lancaster; the Iredell Memorial Lecture). (Chapter 13 in present volume.)
1992d: ‘History and sovereignty: the historiographic response to Europeanisation in two British cultures’, Journal of British Studies, 31, 4, pp. 358–89.
1993a: ‘La déconstruction de l'Europe’, Lettre Internationale, 37, pp. 11–16.
1993b: ‘Notes of an Occidental Tourist I, II’, Common Knowledge, 2, 2, pp. 1–5, 8–18.
1993c: ‘Vous autres européens – or inventing Europe’, Filozofski Vestnik/Acta Philosophica, 14, 2 (Ljubljana: Slovenska Akademija Znanosti in Umetnosti), pp. 141–58.
1993d: ‘Political thought in the English-speaking Atlantic, 1760–1790. Part I: the imperial crisis. Part II: Empire, revolution and an end of early modernity’, in Pocock, , 1993, pp. 246–320[B].
1994a: ‘Deconstructing Europe’, reprinted in History of European Ideas, 18, 3, pp. 329–46.
1994b: ‘Two kingdoms and three histories? Political thought in British contexts’, in Mason, Roger A. (ed.), Scots and Britons: Scottish political thought and the union of 1603 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press), pp. 293–312. (Chapter 4 in present volume.)
1995a: ‘Empire, state and confederation: the War of American Independence as a crisis in multiple monarchy’, in Robertson, John (ed.), A Union for Empire: political thought and the union of 1707 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press), pp. 318–48. (Chapter 9 in present volume.)
1995b: ‘Conclusion: contingency, identity, sovereignty’, in Grant, Alexander and Stringer, Keith J. (eds.), Uniting the Kingdom? The making of British history (London: Routledge), pp. 292–302. (Title source for Chapter 17 in present volume.)
1996a: ‘Standing army and public credit: the institutions of Leviathan’, in Hoak, Dale and Feingold, Mordechai (eds.), The World of William and Mary: Anglo-Dutch perspectives on the Revolution of 1688–89 (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press), pp. 87–103.
1996b: ‘The Atlantic Archipelago and the War of the Three Kingdoms’, in Bradshaw, Brendan and Morrill, John (eds.), The British Problem, c. 1534–1707: state formation in the Atlantic Archipelago (London: Macmillan), pp. 172–91. (Chapter 5 in present volume.)
1996c: La Ricostruzione di un Impero: sovranità britannica e federalismo americano. (Trans. Sergio Luzzatto. Macerata: Biblioteca del Laboratorio di Storia Costituzionale Antoine Barnave; Manduria, Bari, Roma: Piero Lacaita Editore.)
1996d: ‘The making of new kinds of history’, New Zealand Books, 6, 4, 25, pp. 15–17.
1997a: ‘What do we mean by Europe?’, Wilson Quarterly, winter 1997, pp. 12–29.
1997b: ‘Removal from the wings’, London Review of Books, 19, 6, pp. 12–13.
1997c: ‘Deconstructing Europe’, reprinted in Gowan, Peter and Anderson, Perry (eds.), The Question of Europe (London: Verso), pp. 297–317.
1997d: ‘The historian as political actor in polity, society and academy’, Journal of Pacific Studies, 20, pp. 89–112.
1997e: ‘The making of new kinds of history’, reprinted in Edmond, Lauris, Ricketts, Harry and Sewell, Bill (eds.), Under Review: a selection from New Zealand Books, 1991–97 (Lincoln, NZ: Lincoln University Press), pp. 158–63.
1998a: ‘The politics of history: the subaltern and the subversive’, Journal of Political Philosophy, 6, 3, 219–34.
1998b: ‘Law, sovereignty and history in a divided culture: the case of New Zealand and the Treaty of Waitangi’, reprinted in McGill Law Journal, 43, 3, pp. 481–506.
1999a: ‘The Four Seas and the Four Oceans’, in Cool Britannia? What Britishness means to me (Lurgan: Ulster Society Publications), pp. 158–63.
1999b: ‘Nature and history, self and other: European perceptions of world history in the age of encounter’, in Calder, Alex, Lamb, Jonathan and Orr, Bridget (eds.), Voyages and Beaches: Pacific Encounters, 1769–1840 (Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press), pp. 25–44.
1999c: ‘The New British History in Atlantic perspective: an Antipodean commentary’, American Historical Review, 104, 2, pp. 490–500.
1999d: ‘British history: the pursuit of the expanding subject’, in Prest, Wilfred (ed.), British Studies into the 21st Century: perspectives and practices (Melbourne: Australian Scholarly Publishing), pp. 58–72.
1999e: ‘Thomas May and the narrative of civil war’, in Hirst, Derek and Strier, Richard (eds.), Writing and Political Engagement in Seventeenth-Century England (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press), pp. 112–44.
2000a: ‘The Third Kingdom in its history: an afterword’, in Ohlmeyer, Jane H. (ed.), Political Thought in Seventeenth-Century Ireland (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press), pp. 271–80. (Chapter 6 in present volume.)
2000b: ‘Protestant Ireland: the view from a distance’, in Connolly, S. J. (ed.), Political Ideas in Eighteenth-Century Ireland (Dublin: the Four Courts Press), pp. 221–30.
2000c: ‘Gaberlunzie's Return’, New Left Review, 5, pp. 41–52.
2000d: ‘The Union in British history’, Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, 6th Series, 10, pp. 181–96. (Chapter 10 in the present volume.)
2000e: ‘Waitangi as mystery of state: consequences of the ascription of federative capacity to the Maori’, in Ivison, Duncan, Patton, Paul and Sanders, Will (eds.), Political Theory and the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press), pp. 25–35.
2001a: ‘Tangata whenua and Enlightenment anthropology’, reprinted in Binney, Judith (ed.), The Shaping of History: essays from the New Zealand Journal of History (Wellington: Bridget Williams Books), pp. 38–61.
2001b: ‘The treaty between histories’, in Sharp, Andrew and McHugh, Paul (eds.), Histories, Power and Loss: uses of the past – a New Zealand commentary (Wellington: Bridget Williams Books), pp. 75–96.
2002a: ‘The uniqueness of Aotearoa’, Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, 145, 4, pp. 482–87.
2002b: ‘Some Europes in their history’, in Pagden, Anthony (ed.), The Idea of Europe: from antiquity to the European Union (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press), pp. 55–71.
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