Joan-Pau Rubiés brings together here eleven studies published between
1991 and 2005 that illuminate the impact of travel writing on the
transformation of early modern European culture. The new worlds that
European navigation opened up at the turn of the 16th century elicited
a great deal of curiosity and were the subject of a vast range of
writings, much of them with an empirical basis, albeit often subtly
fictionalized. In the context of intense literary and intellectual
activity that characterized the Renaissance, the encounters generated
by European colonial activities in fact produced a remarkable variety
of images of human diversity. Some of these images were conditioned by
the actual dynamics of cross-cultural encounters overseas, but many
others were elaborated in Europe by cosmographers, historians and
philosophers pursuing their own moral and political agendas. As the
studies included here show, the combined effect was in the long term
dramatic: interacting with the impact of humanism and of
insurmountable religious divisions, travel writing decisively
contributed to the transformation of European culture towards the
concerns of the Enlightenment. The essays illuminate this process
through a combination of general discussions and the contextual
analysis of particular texts and debates, ranging form the earliest
ethnographies produced by merchants travelling to Asia with Vasco da
Gama, to the writings of Jesuit missionaries researching idolatry in
India and China, or thinkers like Hugo Grotius seeking to explain the
origin of the American Indians.
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Studies in the History of Early Modern Travel and Ethnology
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781000939255
Publisert
2023
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Vendor
Routledge
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter