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English
Norton
05 November 2024
Series: A Norton Short
Unfurling a tapestry of surprising and historically overlooked figures spanning forty centuries and six continents, historian Matthew Lockwood narrates lives filled with imagination and wonder, curiosity, connection, and exchange. Familiar icons of exploration like Pocahontas, Columbus, Sacagawea, and Captain Cook find new company in the untold stories of people usually denied the title ""explorers,"" including immigrants, indigenous interpreters, local guides, and fugitive slaves. He highlights female voyagers like Gudrid Far-Traveler and Freydís Eiríksdóttir, Viking women who sailed to North America in 1000 AD, and Mary Wortley Montagu, whose pioneering travels to Constantinople would lead to the development of the world's first smallpox vaccine. Figures like Ghulam Rassul Galwan, a guide for European travelers in the Himalayas, reveal the hidden labor, expertise, and local enthusiasm behind many grand stories of discovery. Other characters, like David Dorr, a man born into slavery in New Orleans who embarked on a Grand Tour of Europe and Egypt, embody discovery and wonder as universal parts of the human condition.

As Lockwood makes clear, people of every background imagine new worlds. Adventurers from every corner of the globe search for the unknown and try to understand it, remaking the world and themselves in the process. Exploration is for everyone who sets off into the unknown. It is the inheritance of all.
By:  
Imprint:   Norton
Country of Publication:   United States
Volume:   0
Dimensions:   Height: 218mm,  Width: 147mm,  Spine: 20mm
Weight:   314g
ISBN:   9781324073871
ISBN 10:   132407387X
Series:   A Norton Short
Pages:   176
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Matthew Lockwood is an assistant professor of history at the University of Alabama and the author of This Land of Promise: A History of Refugees and Exiles in Britain, To Begin the World Over Again, and The Conquest of Death. He lives in Northport, Alabama.

Reviews for Explorers: A New History

Histories of exploration too often focus on white men heroically discovering new lands and ideas. Largely absent from the literature are the stories of people of color, as well as unheralded white women and men, who were explorers too, and deserve to be recognized and applauded for playing a crucial role in creating the interconnected world in which we live. Lockwood's wonderfully insightful and entertaining book helps to fill in this gap and gives voice to those who have been overlooked too long, and without whom the history of exploration is far less interesting and consequential.--Eric Jay Dolin, author ofLeft for Dead and Black Flags, Blue Waters Matthew Lockwood's global history of people who set off for strange lands is an expansive and compassionate account that complicates the old trope of heroic conquerors. Here, we find the lost voices of Indigenous guides, female voyagers, immigrants, and kidnapped and enslaved persons whose experiences have long been overlooked. Explorers: A New History is a long overdue reckoning that strips away the romance of exploration without losing a sense of awe, curiosity, and wonder.--Melissa L. Sevigny, author ofBrave the Wild River: The Untold Story of Two Women Who Mapped the Botany of the Grand Canyon


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