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Iberian Visions of the Pacific Ocean, 1507-1899
Details
In this work, Buschmann incorporates neglected Spanish visions into the European perceptions of the emerging Pacific world. The book argues that Spanish diplomats and intellectuals attempted to create an intellectual link between the Americas and the Pacific Ocean.
In Iberian Visions of the Pacific Ocean, 15071899, Rainer F. Buschmann provides a valuable, well-informed, and stimulating essay on Spanish responses to these changes from the early sixteenth century onward. The author masters the literature impressively, reads accurately the sources he uses, and wields their evidence perceptively, informatively, and sometimes vividly. (Felipe Fernández-Armesto, American Historical Review, Vol. 121 (4), October, 2016)
Iberian Visions of the Pacific Ocean is a very ambitious project, encompassing nearly half a millennium of Pacific 'visions' when the ocean was not even a figment in most people's imaginations. Iberian Visions offers an incisive political history that documents closely the debates arising from the growing interest in the area. especially interesting for political historians and thoseseeking information about the 'legality' of conquest and colonialism, extending our knowledge of the political backdrop of European imperial rivalries. (Mercedes Camino, The Journal of Pacific History, Vol. 50 (2), May, 2015)
Autorentext
Rainer F. Buschmann is professor and founding faculty member of history at the California State University Channel Islands, USA. He has formerly taught at Hawaii Pacific University and Purdue University, USA. He has written extensively on the European interactions with the Pacific Ocean.
Klappentext
In the second half of the eighteenth century, renewed exploration of the Pacific Ocean gained much attention in Europe. As mostly British and French explorers ventured to the region searching for mythical continents and legendary passageways linking the Atlantic with the Pacific oceans, they encountered the waterlogged world of Oceania - a sea of more than 20,000 islands located in the Pacific. Claiming this newly encountered region as a 'new world' of the eighteenth-century, many voyagers sought to distance themselves from the earlier Iberian periods of expansion. In this work, Buschmann incorporates neglected Spanish visions into the European perceptions of the emerging Pacific world. Buschmann maintains that Spanish diplomats and intellectuals, partially inspired by the political desire to keep the northern Europeans out of the Pacific, envisioned the ocean as an area devoid of mythical continents as well as riches and enchantments. These Spanish notables attempted to create an intellectual link between the Americas and the Pacific Ocean by arguing that the Franco-British exploration of the eighteenth century had a great deal in common with the earlier expansive wave of the Portuguese and the Spaniards.
Inhalt
Introduction 1. On Shrinking Continents and Expanding Oceans 2. On Chronometers, Cartography, and Curiosity 3. On Narrating the Pacific 4. On Useful Information 5. On History and Hydrography 6. On the Rediscovery of the Americas Epilogue: On the Lingering Spanish Lake Bibliography Endnotes
Weitere Informationen
- Allgemeine Informationen
- GTIN 09781137304704
- Auflage 2014
- Sprache Englisch
- Genre History
- Lesemotiv Verstehen
- Anzahl Seiten 292
- Größe H216mm x B140mm
- Jahr 2014
- EAN 9781137304704
- Format Fester Einband
- ISBN 978-1-137-30470-4
- Veröffentlichung 24.10.2014
- Titel Iberian Visions of the Pacific Ocean, 1507-1899
- Autor R. Buschmann
- Untertitel Palgrave Studies in Pacific History
- Gewicht 4876g
- Herausgeber Springer Nature B.V.