As early modern Europe launched its multiple projects of global empire, it simultaneously embarked on an ambitious program of describing and picturing the world. The shapes and meanings of the extraordinary global images that emerged from this process form the subject of this highly original and richly textured study of cultural geography. Inventing Exoticism draws on a vast range of sources from history, literature, science, and art to describe the energetic and sustained international engagements that gave birth to our modern conceptions of exoticism and globalism. Illustrated with more than two hundred images of engravings, paintings, ceramics, and more, Inventing Exoticism shows, in vivid example and persuasive detail, how Europeans came to see and understand the world at an especially critical juncture of imperial imagination. At the turn to the eighteenth century, European markets were flooded by books and artifacts that described or otherwise evoked non-European realms: histories and ethnographies of overseas kingdoms, travel narratives and decorative maps, lavishly produced tomes illustrating foreign flora and fauna, and numerous decorative objects in the styles of distant cultures. Inventing Exoticism meticulously analyzes these, while further identifying the particular role of the Dutch—"Carryers of the World," as Defoe famously called them—in the business of exotica. The form of early modern exoticism that sold so well, as this book shows, originated not with expansion-minded imperialists of London and Paris, but in the canny ateliers of Holland. By scrutinizing these materials from the perspectives of both producers and consumers—and paying close attention to processes of cultural mediation—Inventing Exoticism interrogates traditional postcolonial theories of knowledge and power. It proposes a wholly revisionist understanding of geography in a pivotal age of expansion and offers a crucial historical perspective on our own global culture as it engages in a media-saturated world.
61 This usage of the language of contrast between local and exotic products shows not only the persistence, and compelling ... On early eighteenth-century Dutch exoticism, see Benjamin Schmidt, “Inventing Exoticism: The Project of Dutch ...
Schmidt, Inventing Exoticism, as well as Mason, Infelicities, 3. 39. Correa do Lago and Correa do Lago, Frans Post, who divide Post's artistic career into four phases of increasing exoticism (and diminishing quality). 40. Ibid., 115–89.
1. Cf. Benjamin Schmidt, Inventing Exoticism: Geography, Globalism, and Europe's Early Modern World, University of Pennsylvania Press, 2015. 2. Graham Huggan, The Postcolonial Exotic: Marketing the Margins, London: Routledge, 2001. 3.
... it has been argued that precisely by the end of the seventeenth century 'a new conception of the world and of Europe's relationship to it developed in sources of exotic geography'.31 According ... 31 Schmidt, Inventing Exoticism, 3.
Johnson, Carina L.“Imperial Succession and Mirrors of Tyranny in the Houses of Habsburg and Osman.” In Representing Imperial Rivalry in the Early Modern Mediterranean, edited by Barbara Fuchs and Emily Weissbourd, 80–100. Toronto, 2015.
1 (2009): 183–200; Benjamin Schmidt, Inventing Exoticism: Geography, Globalism, and Europe's Early Modern World (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2015); Christopher Parsons, “The Natural History of Colonial Science: ...
Schmidt, “Inventing exoticism”; Schmidt, “Mapping an exotic World.” “er handelt auch mit Blumen, und versichert, daß Herr D. eberhard in Frankfurt gar viele von ihme bekomme.” Uffenbach, Merkwürdige reisen, III/685.
Merchants and Marvels assembles essays by leading scholars of cultural history, art history, and the history of science and technology to show how ideas about the representation of nature, in both art and science, underwent a profound ...
This is essential reading for any lover of sweeping history, or anyone wishing to understand how the modern world came into being.
Exoticism. and. Knowledge. There is an intriguing and nevertheless overlooked element in the marketing, ... the invention of exoticism, beside Edward Said's Orientalism, New York: Pantheon, 1978; Benjamin Schmidt, Inventing Exoticism.