Egypt, Southwest Asia, India, and Russia in Early Modern English Writing
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Köp båda 2 för 1181 kr"With this book Archer fills a longstanding niche in Renaissance and 17th-century studies by focusing on non-Western European countries as important locations with highly fraught significance in selected writings by Shakespeare, Milton, and Dryden. Examining accounts of travelers, works of geography, and especially literary treatments of these exotic locations, the author provides insightful, exciting, and persuasive interpretations concerning European perspectives on other cultures, emerging ideas about racial and sexual differences, and concepts of civilization and nationhood. . . . Most highly recommended for ambitious upper-division undergraduates through faculty" -- <I>Choice</I> "[Archer's] erudition on the subject is very impressive. He skillfully combines ample research data with his own insights and delights the reader with in-depth discussions." -- <I>Seventeenth-Century News</I> "Archer's impressive scholarly range and rigor, along with his critical acumen and theoretical sophistication, thus make a profound contribution to the cultural analysis of England's early relations with the complex region it labeled India." * Modern Language Quarterly * "Old Worlds is a superlative book in which John Michael Archer offers a thorough, scholarly analysis of veneration and condemnation that is contained in the representations of these several old worlds. Archer's prodigious reading, broad knowledge, and keen awareness of nuance make Old Worlds a welcome contribution to our knowledge of the specific locales taken up, to our understanding of the particular literary works critiqued, and to the scholarship of travel writing." * Sixteenth-Century Journal * "Archer's scholarship is impressive, and his timely and important new argument about the 'para-colonial,' as well as the materials he uncovers, will enrich the debate on, and our understanding of, early modern geographies, world views, and literatures." -- Ania Loomba * University of Illinois, Champaign *
John Michael Archer is Associate Professor of English at the University of New Hampshire. He is the author of Sovereignty and Intelligence: Spying and Court Culture in Early Modern England (Stanford, 1993)