Trading Territories
Jerry Brotton
(Author)Description
In this generously illustrated book, Jerry Brotton documents the dramatic changes in the nature of geographical representation which took place during the sixteenth century, explaining how much they convey about the transformation of European culture at the end of the early modern era. He examines the age's fascination with maps, charts, and globes as both texts and artifacts that provided their owners with a promise of gain, be it intellectual, political, or financial. From the Middle Ages through most of the sixteenth century, Brotton argues, mapmakers deliberately exploited the partial, often conflicting accounts of geographically distant territories to create imaginary worlds. As long as the lands remained inaccessible, these maps and globes were politically compelling. They bolstered the authority of the imperial patrons who employed the geographers and integrated their creations into ever more grandiose rhetorics of expansion. As the century progressed, however, geographers increasingly owed allegiance to the administrators of vast joint-stock companies that sought to exploit faraway lands and required the systematic mapping of commercially strategic territories. By the beginning of the seventeenth century, maps had begun to serve instead as scientific guides, defining objectively valid images of the world.
Product Details
Publisher | Cornell University Press |
Publish Date | November 06, 1997 |
Pages | 256 |
Language | English |
Type | Hardback |
EAN/UPC | 9780801434990 |
Dimensions | 9.5 X 6.4 X 0.9 inches | 1.4 pounds |
About the Author
Reviews
Brotton clearly shows the commercial and political pressures that made mapmaking so important during the 1600s.... The book excellently tells the story of mapmakers' progressing from servants whose maps distorted kings' territories to independent scholars whose maps' political neutrality and geographical accuracy were rewarded by private companies.... Map buffs and those interested in early world exploration should enjoy this one.
-- "Booklist"Brotton successfully examines the function and role of chart, map, and globe from the Middle Ages to the 16th century.... A well-produced book. Recommended for all levels.
-- "Choice"Jerry Brotton brings a literary critic's eye for textual nuance to the rapid developments within European cartography in the late fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. There are plenty of fresh, insightful readings in this book.... Fresh or contentious ideas appear on virtually every page and the book repays careful reading and rereading.
--James Robertson "Sixteenth Century Journal"Jerry Brotton is part of that exciting new world of interactivity between disciplines that would, until not long ago, have been regarded as separate and impermeable.... His is an outstanding achievement of meticulous research and scholarly rigour, yet animated by a method of enquiry that is enriched by being accustomed to reading texts according to literary protocols.... Brotton's study takes us beyond the limits of physical voyages of discovery into what Andrew Marvell described as 'far other worlds and other seas', regions of mind and imagination.
--Christopher Wortham "Parergon"The precise arguments and materials here are quite distinctive and novel.... In showing that maps actively constructed as well as represented the new spaces opened up by exploration, Brotton also significantly reinforces the claim of those who decry the simple empiricist position that maps always came 'after territory' rather than, more often than not, prefiguring what was and was not 'discovered.' It is this point of view that makes maps so important... as sources for detecting the complex motivations and understandings that drove European commercial and territorial expansion in the first place.
--John Agnew "Journal of Modern History"This important book not only treats the ways early modern geographers defined the world's spaces but also makes significant contributions to the history of cartography, printing, and cultural exchange and diversity. Brotton... stresses that Renaissance explorers ventured across the Atlantic and Pacific not out of curiosity or to pursue new intellectual horizons but to seek the goods Europeans lacked and markets for European products. Early-16th-century map production aimed not so much at scientific accuracy as at justifications for wide national authority and territory, often making crucial Western reliance on Ottoman cartography.... Recommended for geographical and historical collections.
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