"A Confluence of Transatlantic Networks: Elites, Capitalism, and Confederate Migration to Brazil" is a study in Atlantic world history that examines the qualitative nature of capitalism's processes through the lens of social networks.
Demonstrates how portions of interconnected trust-based kinship, business, and ideational transatlantic networks evolved over roughly a century and a half and eventually converged to promote, and facilitate the migration of southern elites to Brazil in the post-Civil War era. Placing that migration in the context of the Atlantic world sharpens our understanding of the transborder dynamic of such mainstream nineteenth-century historical currents as international commerce, liberalism, Protestantism, and Freemasonry.