Recent years have seen an explosion of interest in early modern globalization, travel and travel literature, whilst utopian literature has proved to be a continuing source of fascination for students of the intellectual and literary history of the early modern period. Drawing on this growth of interest, this volume brings together new work from an international range of scholars working on these fields of research and the interactions between them. New Worlds Reflected provides a significant contribution both to the history of utopianism and travel, and to the wider cultural and intellectual…mehr
Recent years have seen an explosion of interest in early modern globalization, travel and travel literature, whilst utopian literature has proved to be a continuing source of fascination for students of the intellectual and literary history of the early modern period. Drawing on this growth of interest, this volume brings together new work from an international range of scholars working on these fields of research and the interactions between them. New Worlds Reflected provides a significant contribution both to the history of utopianism and travel, and to the wider cultural and intellectual history of the time, assembling original essays from those interested in the representations of the globe and new and ideal worlds in the period from 1500 to 1800, and in the imaginative reciprocal responsiveness of utopian and travel writing.
Introduction; Part 1 Utopia and Knowledge; Chapter 1 Rebuilding solomon's Temple: Richard hakluyt's Great Instauration David Harris Sacks; Chapter 2 Kepler's Somnium and Francis Godwin's The Man in the Moone : Births of Science-Fiction 1593-1638 William Poole; Chapter 3 Utopia Millenarianism and the Baconian Programme of Margaret Cavendish's The Blazing World (1666) Line Cottegnies; Part 2 Utopian Communities and Piracy; Chapter 4 of the author's dissertation 'Pirates Merchants Settlers and Slaves: Making an Indo-Atlantic Trade World 1640-1730' (University of California-Santa Cruz 2008) which explores global trade networks and trans-cultural settlements that connected the Atlantic and Indian Ocean worlds in the early modern era. The author wishes to thank Chloë Houston Birkbeck College London the University of California-London the British Library the Bodleian Library at Oxford University and the Huntington Library in San Marino California. Kevin P. McDonald; Chapter 5 The Uses of 'Piracy': Discourses of Mercantilism and Empire in Hakluyt's The Famous Voyage of Sir Francis Drake 1 Parts of this chapter also appear in Claire Jowitt The Culture of Piracy 1580-1630: English Literature and Seaborne Crime (Aldershot 2010). Claire Jowitt; Chapter 6 Palmares: Utopian Representations of a Runaway Settlement in Colonial Brazil Analisa De Grave; Part 3 Utopia and the State; Chapter 7 Utopia and Education in the Seventeenth Century: Bacon's Salomon's House and its Influence Chloë Houston; Chapter 8 ' Atlantick and Eutopian Polities': Utopianism Republicanism and Constitutional Design in the Interregnum. 1 I would like to thank Joad Raymond for his very helpful suggestions for this article. I am also very grateful to Antti Tahvanainen Robyn Adams and to the editor of this volume Chloë Houston. Rosanna Cox; Chapter 9 Henry Neville's The Isle of Pines : From Sexual Utopia to Political Dystopia Daniel Carey; Chapter 10 Afterword Andrew Hadfield;
Introduction; Part 1 Utopia and Knowledge; Chapter 1 Rebuilding solomon's Temple: Richard hakluyt's Great Instauration David Harris Sacks; Chapter 2 Kepler's Somnium and Francis Godwin's The Man in the Moone : Births of Science-Fiction 1593-1638 William Poole; Chapter 3 Utopia Millenarianism and the Baconian Programme of Margaret Cavendish's The Blazing World (1666) Line Cottegnies; Part 2 Utopian Communities and Piracy; Chapter 4 of the author's dissertation 'Pirates Merchants Settlers and Slaves: Making an Indo-Atlantic Trade World 1640-1730' (University of California-Santa Cruz 2008) which explores global trade networks and trans-cultural settlements that connected the Atlantic and Indian Ocean worlds in the early modern era. The author wishes to thank Chloë Houston Birkbeck College London the University of California-London the British Library the Bodleian Library at Oxford University and the Huntington Library in San Marino California. Kevin P. McDonald; Chapter 5 The Uses of 'Piracy': Discourses of Mercantilism and Empire in Hakluyt's The Famous Voyage of Sir Francis Drake 1 Parts of this chapter also appear in Claire Jowitt The Culture of Piracy 1580-1630: English Literature and Seaborne Crime (Aldershot 2010). Claire Jowitt; Chapter 6 Palmares: Utopian Representations of a Runaway Settlement in Colonial Brazil Analisa De Grave; Part 3 Utopia and the State; Chapter 7 Utopia and Education in the Seventeenth Century: Bacon's Salomon's House and its Influence Chloë Houston; Chapter 8 ' Atlantick and Eutopian Polities': Utopianism Republicanism and Constitutional Design in the Interregnum. 1 I would like to thank Joad Raymond for his very helpful suggestions for this article. I am also very grateful to Antti Tahvanainen Robyn Adams and to the editor of this volume Chloë Houston. Rosanna Cox; Chapter 9 Henry Neville's The Isle of Pines : From Sexual Utopia to Political Dystopia Daniel Carey; Chapter 10 Afterword Andrew Hadfield;
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