Book contents
- The Cambridge History of America and the World
- The Cambridge History of America and the World
- The Cambridge History of America and the World
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Maps
- Contributors to Volume I
- General Introduction: What is America and the World?
- Introduction: What Does America and the World “Mean” before 1825?
- Part I Geographies
- Part II People
- Part III Empires
- Part IV Circulation/Connections
- 13 West Africa, 1500–1825
- 14 The Commercial Worlds of Early America
- 15 Uncertain America: Settler Colonies, the Circulation of Ideas, and the Vexed Situation of Early American Thought
- 16 America and the Pacific: The View from the Beach
- Part V Institutions
- Part VI Revolutions
- Index
16 - America and the Pacific: The View from the Beach
from Part IV - Circulation/Connections
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 November 2021
- The Cambridge History of America and the World
- The Cambridge History of America and the World
- The Cambridge History of America and the World
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Maps
- Contributors to Volume I
- General Introduction: What is America and the World?
- Introduction: What Does America and the World “Mean” before 1825?
- Part I Geographies
- Part II People
- Part III Empires
- Part IV Circulation/Connections
- 13 West Africa, 1500–1825
- 14 The Commercial Worlds of Early America
- 15 Uncertain America: Settler Colonies, the Circulation of Ideas, and the Vexed Situation of Early American Thought
- 16 America and the Pacific: The View from the Beach
- Part V Institutions
- Part VI Revolutions
- Index
Summary
By the time Herman Melville introduced American readers to Queequeg, the Polynesian harpooner in Moby Dick (1851), Pacific Islanders were an established presence in many maritime centers of the continent. They made up to 20 percent of the entire United States whaling fleet, most of them present on the west coast but with substantial numbers living around Melville’s own east coast environs. Hawaiians alone constituted one tenth of the population of San Francisco. Equally significant, by the middle of the nineteenth century up to 10 percent of some Pacific Island communities had experienced voyaging to American shores. Islanders’ adventures to the far eastern rim of the Pacific world were extensions of the seagoing spirit that had birthed their various societies in the first place.
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- The Cambridge History of America and the World , pp. 357 - 378Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022