Freedom Round the Globe
Synopsis
'A triumph' – Christopher Clark, author of The Sleepwalkers
A fresh and surprising history that reckons with a defining global moment: The American Revolution.
In 1776, the world was in flux. Winds of change were blowing far beyond the shores of the nascent United States of America, whether in the debating clubs of Edinburgh, where women were demanding happiness along with men, or the brutal sugar plantations of the Caribbean, where enslaved Africans were rising up in rebellion.
In this authoritative revisionist history, Sarah M. S. Pearsall restores the shock and drama of that epoch-defining moment, revealing how the fires of change that sparked the American Revolution were igniting all around the world. From St. Kitts to Kolkata, Ghana to Guangzhou, all kinds of people, not just the men declaring independence in Philadelphia, asserted their rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
As we approach the 250th anniversary of the Revolution, Freedom Round the Globe tells a story the world needs to hear, of the fraught origins of a nation that by turns perplexes, fascinates and horrifies us. It is a story of global transformation and revolutionary fervour, of triumph as well as tragedy, and of the insurgents, lovers, and dreamers who dared to imagine better societies.
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Reviews
Fantastic . . . The writing sparkles . . . By making the frame global, Pearsall sharpens our awareness of the specificities of the American trajectory . . . famous episodes appear newly mysterious, like a wristwatch that has been handed to a street magician, magicked into nothingness and then turned into a pigeon before being laid once again in the palm of the astonished bystander . . . a triumph, I loved it'
