Front cover image for Marvelous possessions : the wonder of the New World

Marvelous possessions : the wonder of the New World

This study examines the ways in which Europeans of the late Middle Ages and the early modern period represented non-European peoples and took possession of their lands, in particular the New World. In a series of readings of travel narratives, judicial documents and official documents, Greenblatt shows that "the experience of the marvellous", central to both art and philosophy, was yoked by Columbus and others to service of colonial appropriation. He argues that the traditional symbolic actions and legal rituals through which European sovereignty was asserted were strained to breaking point by the unprecedented nature of the discovery of the New World. But the book also shows that "the experience of the marvellous" is not necessarily an agent of empire: in writers as different as Herodotus, Jean de Lery and Montaigne - and notably in "Mandeville's Travels"--Wonder is the sign of a recognition of cultural difference. Greenblatt reaches back to the ancient Greeks and forward to the present to ask how it is possible, in a time of disorientation, hatred of the other and possesiveness, to keep the capacity for wonder from being poisoned
Print Book, English, 1992
Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1992
History
ix, 202 pages, 8 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations ; 24 cm
9780198123828, 9780198122661, 0198123825, 0198122667
1012620278
"The Clarendon lectures (Oxford University) and the Carpenter lectures (University of Chicago), 1988"--Page opposite title page