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E-raamat: Link That Divides: Race, Empire, and the Quest for the Nicaragua Canal in the Nineteenth Century

(Indian Institute of Technology, Mandi)
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This important book illuminates the deeply intertwined histories of the Nicaragua Canal and the Afro-Indigenous Mosquito Coast, uncovering a compelling truth, long overshadowed by the triumphalist narrative of the Panama Canal. Focusing on British and US efforts to control the canal route through Nicaragua, Rajeshwari Dutt shows how imperial ambition, racial ideology, and local power struggles shaped one of Latin America's most contested infrastructure projects. She traces the role of racial language in imperial, colonial, and national agendas; the shifting dynamics of Anglo-American imperialism on the Mosquito Coast; and the violence embedded in the very pursuit of interoceanic connection. Methodologically, the book advances a practice of reading failure as a lens through which to understand the fragility of imperial projects and the contradictions that undermine their global ambitions. At its heart, The Link That Divides reveals a central paradox: that dreams of connection were built on and undone by the reality of division and exclusion.

Arvustused

'Rajeshwari Dutt sheds new light on the shift from British to US hegemony in Latin America by revealing how the Afro-Indigenous Mosquito Kingdom shaped the efforts of rival empires to construct an interoceanic canal through Nicaragua. A fascinating and important book.' Michel Gobat, University of Pittsburgh 'This exhaustively researched book offers a new understanding of Nicaragua's importance in global struggles over race, empire, and efforts to connect the Atlantic and Pacific in the nineteenth century.' Aims McGuinness, University of California, Santa Cruz

Muu info

How the transatlantic quest for the Nicaragua Canal was built on-and shattered by-the politics of race and empire.
Part I:
1. Glimmers of a canal;
2. The British conquest of San Juan del
Norte;
3. The consolidation of Greytown: Part II:
4. United States enters the
canal contest;
5. The rise and fall of Greytown;
6. Filibustering on the San
Juan; Part III:
7. The road to arbitration;
8. Canal dreams and the fate of
the Mosquito Reserve; Conclusion: the turn towards Panama.
Rajeshwari Dutt is Associate Professor in the School of Humanities and Social Sciences at the Indian Institute of Technology, Mandi. She is the author of Maya Caciques in Early National Yucatán (2017) and Empire on Edge: The British Struggle for Order in Belize during Yucatán's Caste War, 18471901 (2020).