`his writing teems with apt insight' Financial Times
`a subtle, witty analysis of the "possessive madness" and sleight of mind by which Christian capitalism turned marvel into mandate.' Observer
`Marvelous Possessions is a marvellous book. It is also a compelling and powerful one. Nothing so original has ever been written on European responses to "the wonder of the New World".' Times Literary Supplement
`we owe him thanks for his scholarship, and for his study of the too-little-chronicled Go-Betweens in European-Indian relations.' Esmond Wright, Contemporary Review, March 1992
'Greenblatt's sensitivity to language helps him to unravel the fabulous ingenuity of Mandeville's Travels, the self-serving ambiguities of Columbus's log-books, and the conflicting reports of later sixteenth-century voyagers. The reader is rewarded by gems of analysis. This book is likely to be read long after many of the celebratory and recriminatory books on 1492 have been retired.'
David Cressy, California State University, Long Beach, Literature & History, third series, 2/1
'Greenblatt impressively shows how early recorders' responses to the New World are mediated through discourses of the marvellous, encounters between the materially unexpected ... and the existing codes and rhetorics for dealing with the marvellous which were part of the European baggage of discovery. The travel narrative is ideal new historical material: it is a carefully constructed text which frequently uses literary models to account for experiences
which are presented as real and not fictions. Marvelous Possessions is an important contribution to this field.'
Thomas Healy, Birkbeck College, Renaissance Studies, Vol. 7, No. 1
'his field of inquiry is wide-ranging ... Marvelous Possessions stands alone ... in its effort to understand the wonder the discoverers felt and the language they used to describe the marvels they encountered.'
Virginia Mason Vaughan, Clark University, MLR, 88.4, 1993
'it is an important contribution to the cultural history of the New World.'
Year's Work in English Studies
One of the pleasures...is the author's luxurious surrender to bafflement and awe. he never harries his texts with demands for
Les mer