Buch, Englisch, 424 Seiten, Format (B × H): 172 mm x 246 mm, Gewicht: 651 g
Buch, Englisch, 424 Seiten, Format (B × H): 172 mm x 246 mm, Gewicht: 651 g
Reihe: Blackwell Companions to Literature and Culture
ISBN: 978-1-118-43880-0
Verlag: Wiley-Blackwell
Featuring twenty one newly-commissioned essays, A Companion to the Global Renaissance: English Literature and Culture in the Era of Expansion demonstrates how today's globalization is the result of a complex and lengthy historical process that had its roots in England's mercantile and cross-cultural interactions of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. - An innovative collection that interrogates the global paradigm of our period and offers a new history of globalization by exploring its influences on English culture and literature of the early modern period.
- Moves beyond traditional notions of Renaissance history mainly as a revival of antiquity and presents a new perspective on England's mercantile and cross-cultural interactions with the New and Old Worlds of the Americas, Africa, and the East, as well with Northern Europe.
- Illustrates how twentieth-century globalization was the result of a lengthy and complex historical process linked to the emergence of capitalism and colonialism
- Explores vital topics such as East-West relations and Islam; visual representations of cultural 'others'; gender and race struggles within the new economies and cultures; global drama on the cosmopolitan English stage, and many more
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
List of Illustrations ix
Notes on Contributors x
Acknowledgments xvi
Introduction: The Global Renaissance 1
Jyotsna G. Singh
Part I: Mapping the Global 29
1 The New Globalism: Transcultural Commerce, Global Systems Theory, and Spenser’s Mammon 31
Daniel Vitkus
2 “Travailing” Theory: Global Flows of Labor and the Enclosure of the Subject 50
Crystal Bartolovich
3 Islam and Tamburlaine’s World-picture 67
John Michael Archer
4 Traveling Nowhere: Global Utopias in the Early Modern Period 82
Chloë Houston
Part II: “Contact Zones” 99
5 The Benefi ts of a Warm Study: The Resistance to Travel before Empire 101
Andrew Hadfield
6 “Apes of Imitation”: Imitation and Identity in Sir Thomas Roe’s Embassy to India 114
Nandini Das
7 A Multinational Corporation: Foreign Labor in the London East India Company 129
Richmond Barbour
8 Where was Iceland in 1600? 149
Mary C. Fuller
9 East by North-east: The English among the Russians, 1553–1603 163
Gerald MacLean
10 The Politics of Identity: William Adams, John Saris, and the English East India Company’s Failure in Japan 178
Catherine Ryu
11 The Queer Moor: Bodies, Borders, and Barbary Inns 190
Ian Smith
Part III: Networks of Exchange: Traveling Objects 205
12 Guns and Gawds: Elizabethan England’s Infi del Trade 207
Matthew Dimmock
13 Cassio, Cash, and the “Infidel 0”: Arithmetic, Double-entry Bookkeeping, and Othello’s Unfaithful Accounts 223
Patricia Parker
14 Seeds of Sacrifice: Amaranth, the Gardens of Tenochtitlan and Spenser’s Faerie Queene 242
Edward M. Test
15 “So Pale, So Lame, So Lean, So Ruinous”: The Circulation of Foreign Coins in Early Modern England 262
Stephen Deng
16 Canary, Bristoles, Londres, Ingleses: English Traders in the Canaries in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries 279
Barbara Sebek
17 “The Whole Globe of the Earth”: Almanacs and Their Readers 294
Adam Smyth
18 Cesare Vecellio, Venetian Writer and Art-book Cosmopolitan 305
Ann Rosalind Jones
Part IV: The Globe Staged 323
19 Bettrice’s Monkey: Staging Exotica in Early Modern London Comedy 325
Jean E. Howard
20 The Maltese Factor: The Poetics of Place in The Jew of Malta and The Knight of Malta 340
Virginia Mason Vaughan
21 Local/Global Pericles: International Storytelling, Domestic Social Relations, Capitalism 355
David Morrow
Index 378