I paid $2.5 at Costco a couple of weeks ago. ๐คท๐ปโโ๏ธ
@thiagokrause
Associate Professor of History & African American Studies, Wayne State University. Brazilian historian in the US. Interested in LLMs for research and wary of its impacts on learning and society. Opinions are my own and do not reflect my employer. PT/ENG.
I paid $2.5 at Costco a couple of weeks ago. ๐คท๐ปโโ๏ธ
Haskell For God, King, and People Forging Commonwealth Bonds in Renaissance Virginia UNC PRESS McDonnell THE POLITICS OF WAR Race, Class, & Conflict in Revolutionary Virginia BULLOCK Strangers within the Realm Bernard Bailyn Philip D. Morgan Revolutionary Brotherhood JOHN FREDERICK MARTIN DA 16 โข S92 1991 Institute CHAPEL m PROFITS IN THE WILDERNESS HC 107 .A1IM18 1991 copy 2 Institute An ANXIOUS PURSUIT JOYCE E. CHAPLIN 265 . V8M39 2007 INSTITUTE CHAPEL HILL Chapel Hill ALAN TAYLOR A CONTINENTAL HISTORY, 1850-1873 AMERICAN CIVIL WARS NORTON
Best thing of going to Fabrรญcio Pradoโs โAtlantic Exchangesโ workshop at the Omohundro Institute was seeing friends, second the stimulating discussions, and last but not least getting a bunch of free books!
โI donโt mean to suggest that AI is useless or trivial, but there is a long history of time-saving digital technologies that at best make us more productive yet overwhelmed โ and at worst, just make us feel overwhelmed.โ
And once a friend - Arne Bialuschewski - told me he found some records on pirates who had attacked Brazil in the Bermudas archives! I guess I have an excuse to visit one dayโฆ
Never heard of it, Iโm curious now
Great archive, even better city! Iโd love to go back, although I mainly need to look at the Chambre records.
A PIG! Well, that seems like the best story ever.
Oh, there are a couple I really dislike! Brazilian archives are often very... peculiar, and not in a good way.
I was procastinating a while back and listed all archives I've worked in person.
I think my favorite archives are the Archives nationales de France, the British National Archives, and the Torre do Tombo (but I still need to visit a few more).
What are yours, #skystorians?
On Monday, at 1 PM, we welcome Casey Schmitt to our Ships & Seafaring Talk, where she will present her book "The Predatory Sea", a full-length study of the entangled history of captivity and colonialism using Spanish, French and English archives. Sign up here: www.eventbrite.com/e/ships-seaf...
French always does, I concede that.
I agree - my translator is arguing for Ancien Rรฉgime, but I donโt see the point.
Both "Ancien Rรฉgime" and "Old Regime" show up in Anglophone historiography. Which do you prefer, #skystorians?
Come spend a year with great colleagues in Guelph (Ontario, Canada)
improvisationinstitute.ca/about-iicsi/...
It really makes me wonder about other fields (or about these guys). LLMs can do transcription, yes, they can fake academic writing, yes, but I still canโt see a LLM-generated paper making past peer-review in any halfway decent history journal.
Now Iโm curiousโฆ
I finally read Menzโs โO Senhor da Morteโ this weekend and strongly recommend itโฆ I like some of Tรขmis Parronโs articles, such as โThe British Empire and the Suppression of the Slave Trade to Brazilโ (JWH, 2018)โฆ But I must stop because I should be reading more stuff right now. ๐
Iโm reading @svenbeckert.bsky.socialโs new tome, worth reading for a global framework; I recently returned to Zahediehโs great โThe Capital and the Colonies,โ but you know it better than me; I liked Shovlinโs โTrading with the Enemyโ and Barthโs โThe Currency of Empireโโฆ
Hey historians, what are your favorite readings on political economy? Bonus points for anything that also related to cross-cultural trade, war, and violence.
Thanks!๐๏ธ
Image of a book jacket for Beyond the Ocean: France and the Atlantic World from the Crusades to the Age of Revolutions by Christopher Hodson and Brett Rushforth.
Full book jacket just dropped, and we're pretty happy with it. Huge thanks to @cecilefromont.bsky.social, @soccerpolitics.bsky.social, Alice, and Andrรฉs for your generous words! #earlymodern #BeyondTheOcean global.oup.com/academic/pro...
Do send me a pdf, please, low!
Foi idiossincrรกtico, admito!
EM รฉ early modern, nรฃo coube no post! Tou lendo o Beckert. ร uma atualizaรงรฃo legal (estou na parte I ainda) do Wallerstein e Braudel, uma sรญntese bem organizada - mas ainda um tanto anglocentrica, supervalorizando Barbados (por mais que seja importante!).
(Chart 1: โSugar Prices at Amsterdam, 1609โ1763โ): Line chart of annual average sugar prices in Amsterdam (y-axis: groten per pound; x-axis: years 1609โ1763) for multiple origins and grades: Brazil White (highest series), Sรฃo Tomรฉ, Barbados, Caribbean & Surinamese aggregate, Martinique, Saint-Domingue, and dashed โpowder/refinedโ series (Martinique Powder, Saint-Domingue Powder, East Indian Powder). Brazil White is very high and volatile in the 1620sโ1650s (peaks above 30 groten), then reappears lower (roughly 9โ13) in the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries; raw Caribbean series cluster mostly around 4โ9 groten when present, while powder/refined series sit above the raw lines and rise sharply in the 1750sโ1760s. Shaded background bands mark major conflict periods (Dutch Brazil 1630โ54; Nine Yearsโ War 1689โ97; War of Spanish Succession 1702โ13; War of Austrian Succession 1744โ48; Seven Yearsโ War 1756โ63), and line breaks indicate years with no surviving quotations.
(Chart: โSugar Prices at Amsterdam, 1664โ1763โ): Line chart of annual average sugar prices in Amsterdam (y-axis: groten per pound, roughly 2โ20; x-axis: 1664โ1763) with separate series for Brazil White (highest line), Sรฃo Tomรฉ, Caribbean & Surinamese (aggregate), Barbados, Martinique, Saint-Domingue, and dashed refined/powder grades (Martinique Powder, Saint-Domingue Powder, East Indian Powder). Brazil White is very high in the mid-1660s (around 16โ19 groten), then mostly around 10โ13 when quoted (with long gaps), and rises again in the 1750s. Barbados and the Caribbean/Surinamese aggregate sit lower (generally about 5โ9), with a clear dip in the early 1720s. Martinique and Saint-Domingue begin only in 1719 and cluster around 4โ6 through the 1720sโ1730s, then rise in the 1740s and especially the 1750s. Powder/refined series appear mainly after 1750 and run above the raw Martinique and Saint-Domingue lines, reaching the mid-teens by the early 1760s. Shaded background bands mark major wars (Franco-Dutch War 1672โ78, Nine Yearsโ War 1689โ97, War of Spanish Succession 1702โ13, War of Austrian Succession 1744โ48, Seven Yearsโ War 1756โ63); vertical dashed markers label key moments (Rampjaar, Methuen, Law/SSB, Aix-la-Chapelle). Line breaks indicate years with no surviving quotations.
Looking at EM sugar prices across multiple periods is fascinating, even though my series is incomplete. The collapse after Barbados enters the picture makes every other change look like peanuts. I knew that (and the literature has known it for ages), but it is still wild to see it plotted.
Iโd like to bring you here in person next time!
But I finally transcribed and translated one of the documents of the Lima pardos case that is available online and some from Archivio Storico de Propaganda Fide on the extraordinary case of Lourenรงo da Silva de Mendonรงa to discuss them with my students next week. Looking forward to it!
One of my favorite classes to teach in my HIS 3000 course on slavery is a discussion of how to think about early opposition to slavery and an intellectual history of the enslaved. I always assign @kbgraubart.bsky.social's awesome WMQ article and the famous Quaker Germantown petition from 1688...