India and Europe in the global eighteenth centuryEd.Simon Davies, Daniel Sanjiv Roberts and Gabriel Sánchez EspinosaOxford University Studies in the Enlightenment (anciennement SVEC) 2014:01The long eighteenth century was a period of major transformation for Europe and India as imperialism heralded a new global order. Eschewing the reductive perspectives of nation-state histories and postcolonial ‘east vs west’ oppositions, contributors to India and Europe in the global eighteenth century put forward a more nuanced and interdisciplinary analysis. Using eastern as well as western sources, authors present fresh insights into European and Indian relations and highlight:· how anxieties over war and piracy shaped commercial activity;· how French, British and Persian histories of India reveal the different geo-political issues at stake;· the material legacy of India in European cultural life;· how novels parodied popular views of the Orient and provided counter-narratives to images of India as the site of corruption;· how social transformations, traditionally characterised as ‘Mughal decline’, in effect forged new global connections that informed political culture into the nineteenth century.Daniel Sanjiv Roberts, IntroductionAnthony Strugnell, A view from afar: India in Raynal’s Histoire des deux IndesClaire Gallien, British orientalism, Indo-Persian historiography and the politics of global knowledgeJaved Majeed, Globalising the Goths: ‘The siren shores of Oriental literature’ in John Richardson’s A Dictionary of Persian, Arabic, and English (1777-1780)Deirdre Coleman, ‘Voyage of conception’: John Keats and IndiaSonja Lawrenson, ‘The country chosen of my heart’: the comic cosmopolitanism of The Orientalist, or, electioneering in Ireland, a tale, by myselfDaniel Sanjiv Roberts, Orientalism and ‘textual attitude’: Bernier’s appropriation by Southey and OwensonFelicia Gottmann, Intellectual history as global history: Voltaire’s Fragments sur l’Inde and the problem of enlightened commerceJames Watt, Fictions of commercial empire, 1774-1782Gabriel Sánchez Espinosa, The Spanish translation of Bernardin de Saint-Pierre's La Chaumière indienne : its fortunes and significance in a country divided by ideology, politics and warJohn McAleer, Displaying its wares: material culture, the East India Company and British encounters with India in the long eighteenth centuryMogens R. Nissen, The Danish Asiatic Company: colonial expansion and commercial interestsLakshmi Subramanian, Whose pirate? Reflections on state power and predation on India’s western littoralFlorence D’Souza, A comparative study of English and French views of pre-colonial SuratSeema Alavi, The Mughal decline and the emergence of new global connections in early modern IndiaSummariesList of contributorsBibliographyIndex‘Adopting multi-disciplinary approaches, contributors stress the complexity, subtlety and intricacy of the remarkable global connections between India and Europe in the eighteenth century. This book will undoubtedly provoke not only lively debate, but also much further research.’Maria Misra, Keble College, Oxford and author of Vishnu’s crowded temple: India since the Great Rebellion .Oxford University Studies in the Enlightenment (previously SVEC ) January 2014ISBN 9780729410809, xii+341 pages, 14 ills, £65 / €85 / $115Parution de la Voltaire Foundation.Pour des renseignements complémentaires sur ce volume /For further information on this book:http://xserve.volt.ox.ac.uk/VFcatalogue/details.php?recid=6564Pour tout autre renseignement, ou pour passer une commande / To order this book or other Voltaire Foundation publications: http://www.voltaire.ox.ac.uk/www_vf/orders/orders.ssiPour tout renseignement complémentaire merci de contacter email@voltaire.ox.ac.uk
↧