Caroline Dodds Pennock is a Senior Lecturer in International History at the University of Sheffield and the UK's only Aztec historian. Her first book, BONDS OF BLOOD: GENDER, LIFECYCLE AND SACRIFICE IN AZTEC CULTURE (Palgrave Macmillan) won the Royal Historical Society's Gladstone Prize for 2008. She has appeared on TV programmes for broadcasters including the BBC, the Smithsonian Channel and Netflix, and has acted as a named historical consultant for several TV projects, as well as writing for popular publications including Scientific American, BBC History Magazine, BBC World Histories, BBC Knowledge Magazine and History Today.
On Savage Shores is a work of historical recovery . . . few books
make as compelling a case for such a reimagining
*GUARDIAN, Book of the Day*
In On Savage Shores, Dodds Pennock has performed a monumental work
of historical excavation. Beautifully written and painstakingly
researched, this is first-rate scholarship
*FINANCIAL TIMES*
A thrilling, beautifully written and important book that changes
how we look at transatlantic history, finally placing Indigenous
peoples not on the side-lines but at the centre of the narrative.
Highly recommended
*PETER FRANKOPAN*
Dodds Pennock's unpeeling of the indigenous experience from obscure
manuscripts . . . is a much-needed and refreshing take on our
all-too Eurocentric telling of the past
*THE TIMES*
Not only changes how we think about the first contact between
America and Europe but also sets the methodological standard for a
new way of understanding the origin of the modern world
*NEW YORK REVIEW OF BOOKS*
On Savage Shores is mind-blowing, and it's an important
contribution to struggle for a fair and more balanced telling of
history - I felt genuinely enlightened. Dodds Pennock is a truth
teller of the highest order, and a first class communicator. This
is how history should be told
*BENJAMIN ZEPHANIAH*
On Savage Shores offers a welcome non-Eurocentric narrative about
how the great civilisations of the Americas discovered Europe . . .
an important book
*INDEPENDENT*
An untold story of colonial history, both epic and intimate, and a
thrilling revelation, not about the invasion of the Americas by
Europeans, but the journeys of Indigenous people to Europe.
Caroline Dodds Pennock is the perfect guide, cannily and eloquently
shifting the axis of global history away from its Eurocentric
grip
*ADAM RUTHERFORD*
Caroline Dodds Pennock's utterly original book is chock full of
remarkable stories . . . there is much to enjoy in this unusual
history of a forgotten corner of our past
*DAILY MAIL*
Deftly weaves diverse and fascinating tales of the exciting
adventures, complex diplomatic missions, voyages of discovery,
triumphant incursions, and heartbreaking exploitations - of the
many thousands of Indigenous travellers to new lands. Essential
reading for anyone interested in how the events of the "Age of
Exploration" shaped the modern world
*JENNIFER RAFF, author of ORIGIN*
Inspiring and important . . . Expertly researched, convincingly
argued, erudite yet readable, and introduces new readers to the
reality of Indigenous American experience
*HISTORY TODAY*
Caroline Dodds Pennock offers a remarkably fresh and compelling
account of the so-called Age of Discovery. Whether arriving as
ambassadors or enslaved, these travellers experienced Europe as a
new and disorienting world: a place of shocking violence and
perplexing social norms. Pennock, a leading authority on Indigenous
Mexico, tells their stories with insight and humanity. A must
read
*BRETT RUSHFORTH, author of BONDS OF ALLIANCE: INDIGENOUS AND
ATLANTIC SLAVERIES IN NEW FRANCE*
Pennock has pieced together hundreds of fragments to create a new
and remarkable portrait of the travellers who crossed the Atlantic
not to the Americas but from them, and who found in Europe a
strange, often hostile, sometimes intriguing society, vastly
different from their own
*CATHERINE FLETCHER, author of THE BEAUTY AND THE TERROR*
[A] fascinating and fluidly written revisionist history . . . This
innovative and powerful account breaks down long-standing
historical assumptions
*PUBLISHERS WEEKLY starred review*
An impressive and consequential act of research and interpretation
that consistently acknowledges the profound and ongoing . . .
fissure caused to indigenous identities by colonisation,
enslavement, violence and displacement.
*GEOGRAPHICAL*
As Caroline Dodds Pennock shows, there were many thousands of
Native Americans in early modern Europe who have long been
forgotten . . . an overdue diversion of attention towards people
marginalised by race . . . Dodds Pennock's skilful method involves
subtly layering European accounts
*LONDON REVIEW OF BOOKS*
Imaginative and passionately argued
*Wall Street Journal*
An excellent exploration of Indigenous presence in and contribution
to Europe and nascent globalization. Pennock, by recognizing and
voicing a space for Indigenous Peoples in Europe, has told a story
that needs to form a part of every history class from grade school
to university. On Savage Shores is an original and important
recasting of sixteenth-century Europe . . . a decolonizing and
un-whitening approach to the past
*Anishinabek News*
On Savage Shores not only changes how we think about the first
contact between America and Europe but also sets the methodological
standard for a new way of understanding the origin of the modern
world.
*New York review of Books*
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