“Strange beasts of the sea”: Captain Cook, the sea otter and the creation of a transoceanic American empire

On 12 July 1776, Captain James Cook and his crew left England in search of the famed Northwest Passage. Spanish, French, and Russian explorers before him had set out to find this Arctic waterway, which was thought to link the Atlantic and the Pacific Oceans and promised to open up a new, more direct...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Juliane Braun
Language:unknown
Published: Informa UK Limited 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.17613/2ap2-x920
id fthcommons:oai:hcommons.org/hc:24537
record_format openpolar
spelling fthcommons:oai:hcommons.org/hc:24537 2024-10-29T17:46:30+00:00 “Strange beasts of the sea”: Captain Cook, the sea otter and the creation of a transoceanic American empire Juliane Braun 2018 https://doi.org/10.17613/2ap2-x920 unknown Informa UK Limited 885059:Culture:topical 1037841:Nineteenth century:topical 1243504:Pacific Area:geographic 814190:Area studies:topical 836401:Books:topical 958235:History:topical 2018 fthcommons https://doi.org/10.17613/2ap2-x920 2024-10-15T01:04:47Z On 12 July 1776, Captain James Cook and his crew left England in search of the famed Northwest Passage. Spanish, French, and Russian explorers before him had set out to find this Arctic waterway, which was thought to link the Atlantic and the Pacific Oceans and promised to open up a new, more direct trading route with Asia. After seven months of sailing up and down the North American Pacific Coast, however, Cook was forced to conclude that such a passage did not exist. His voyage nonetheless transformed the trade relations between Europe, the USA and Asia. By detailing the rich natural resources the crew encountered in the North Pacific, the published records of Cook’s last voyage alerted a vast reading public, both in Europe and the young USA, to the commercial opportunities emerging from the exploitation of these resources. Using the example of the sea otter, this article explores how new knowledge about the natural world in the Pacific and its dissemination through print culture not only sparked intense rivalries between European colonial powers, but also helped the newly independent USA establish itself as a transoceanic empire. Other/Unknown Material Northwest passage Humanities Commons CORE Deposits Arctic Northwest Passage Pacific
institution Open Polar
collection Humanities Commons CORE Deposits
op_collection_id fthcommons
language unknown
topic 885059:Culture:topical
1037841:Nineteenth century:topical
1243504:Pacific Area:geographic
814190:Area studies:topical
836401:Books:topical
958235:History:topical
spellingShingle 885059:Culture:topical
1037841:Nineteenth century:topical
1243504:Pacific Area:geographic
814190:Area studies:topical
836401:Books:topical
958235:History:topical
Juliane Braun
“Strange beasts of the sea”: Captain Cook, the sea otter and the creation of a transoceanic American empire
topic_facet 885059:Culture:topical
1037841:Nineteenth century:topical
1243504:Pacific Area:geographic
814190:Area studies:topical
836401:Books:topical
958235:History:topical
description On 12 July 1776, Captain James Cook and his crew left England in search of the famed Northwest Passage. Spanish, French, and Russian explorers before him had set out to find this Arctic waterway, which was thought to link the Atlantic and the Pacific Oceans and promised to open up a new, more direct trading route with Asia. After seven months of sailing up and down the North American Pacific Coast, however, Cook was forced to conclude that such a passage did not exist. His voyage nonetheless transformed the trade relations between Europe, the USA and Asia. By detailing the rich natural resources the crew encountered in the North Pacific, the published records of Cook’s last voyage alerted a vast reading public, both in Europe and the young USA, to the commercial opportunities emerging from the exploitation of these resources. Using the example of the sea otter, this article explores how new knowledge about the natural world in the Pacific and its dissemination through print culture not only sparked intense rivalries between European colonial powers, but also helped the newly independent USA establish itself as a transoceanic empire.
author Juliane Braun
author_facet Juliane Braun
author_sort Juliane Braun
title “Strange beasts of the sea”: Captain Cook, the sea otter and the creation of a transoceanic American empire
title_short “Strange beasts of the sea”: Captain Cook, the sea otter and the creation of a transoceanic American empire
title_full “Strange beasts of the sea”: Captain Cook, the sea otter and the creation of a transoceanic American empire
title_fullStr “Strange beasts of the sea”: Captain Cook, the sea otter and the creation of a transoceanic American empire
title_full_unstemmed “Strange beasts of the sea”: Captain Cook, the sea otter and the creation of a transoceanic American empire
title_sort “strange beasts of the sea”: captain cook, the sea otter and the creation of a transoceanic american empire
publisher Informa UK Limited
publishDate 2018
url https://doi.org/10.17613/2ap2-x920
geographic Arctic
Northwest Passage
Pacific
geographic_facet Arctic
Northwest Passage
Pacific
genre Northwest passage
genre_facet Northwest passage
op_doi https://doi.org/10.17613/2ap2-x920
_version_ 1814275848738439168