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Featured researches published by Nicholas Guyatt.


Journal of American Studies | 2002

“An Instrument of National Policy”: Perry Miller and the Cold War

Nicholas Guyatt

Perry Miller was one of the most famous and distinguished American intellectual historians, in the estimation of his contemporaries and the evaluations of more recent scholars. Although his death provided some detractors with an opportunity to question his findings without fear of riposte, more recent studies confirm the relevance of his work to those historians seeking answers today to the questions which he addressed. This is especially true in the Puritan period, where his massive encapsulation of The New England Mind is a routine point of departure for new enquiries.


Archive | 2010

Introduction: War, Empire and Slavery, 1770–1830

Richard Bessel; Nicholas Guyatt; Jane Rendall

For historians, the six decades spanning the end of the eighteenth and the beginning of the nineteenth century seem pivotal to the emergence of modernity. For Eric Hobsbawm, they formed an ‘age of revolution’; for Christopher Bayly, they witnessed a ‘world crisis’ and a series of ‘converging revolutions’; Reinhart Koselleck has described them as a ‘Sattelzeit (saddle period) during which modern ways of thinking took shape against a backdrop of accelerated political, economic and social transformation.1 These dramatic changes, including the emergence of new forms of statehood and of nationalism, and major shifts in global power relations, were partly forged in the crucible of imperial wars fought around the globe by European powers: principally France, Great Britain, Spain, Portugal and the Netherlands. The Seven Years War might claim the distinction of being the first worldwide war. But the American War of Independence, in which the same European rivals were engaged, established an independent nation and a durable model of citizenship. As Jurgen Osterhammel observes in his recent panoramic history of the global nineteenth century, ‘the great conflict between the empires in the years between 1793 and 1815 did not remain limited to Europe. It was fought out on four continents: a true world war.’2 The military and political conflicts between France, Britain and their allies from 1793 to 1815 were larger and more diffuse than earlier wars, and were truly far-reaching in their effects and legacies.3


Archive | 2007

Providence and the invention of the United States, 1607-1876

Nicholas Guyatt


The Journal of American History | 2009

The Outskirts of Our Happiness: Race and the Lure of Colonization in the Early Republic

Nicholas Guyatt


Archive | 1998

The Absence of Peace: Understanding the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict

Nicholas Guyatt


Archive | 2016

Bind Us Apart: How Enlightened Americans Invented Racial Segregation

Nicholas Guyatt


The Journal of American History | 2011

America's Conservatory: Race, Reconstruction, and the Santo Domingo Debate

Nicholas Guyatt


Archive | 2000

Another American century

Nicholas Guyatt


Archive | 2010

War, Empire and Slavery, 1770–1830

Richard Bessel; Nicholas Guyatt; Jane Rendall


The Journal of the Civil War Era | 2014

An Impossible Idea?: The Curious Career of Internal Colonization

Nicholas Guyatt

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