Before Orientalism: London's Theatre of the East, 1576-1626Cambridge University Press, 2003 M10 16 - 238 páginas Before Orientalism examines early Anglo-Indian cultural relations through trade (with the establishment of the East India Company), tourism and diplomacy and illuminates important differences between the reports of travellers and the representations of the London press and stage. Richmond Barbour examines exotic visions of 'the East' as staged in the playhouses, at court, and on the streets of Shakespeare's London. He follows the efforts of the newly established East India Company, and the troubled, deeply theatrical careers of England's first tourist and first ambassador in India, Thomas Coryate and Sir Thomas Roe. |
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Página 1
... performed an “ inaugural scene ” that was hardly novel to its native spectators . Roe was the first fully credentialed ambassador from England to set foot in India ; but this was no Columbian opportunity to write the subcontinent into ...
... performed an “ inaugural scene ” that was hardly novel to its native spectators . Roe was the first fully credentialed ambassador from England to set foot in India ; but this was no Columbian opportunity to write the subcontinent into ...
Página 8
... performing English mastery on foreign soil . Thomas Platter observed , " for the most part the English ... are content ever to learn of foreign matters at home , and ever to take their pastime " ( Chambers , Elizabethan Stage , II : 366 ) ...
... performing English mastery on foreign soil . Thomas Platter observed , " for the most part the English ... are content ever to learn of foreign matters at home , and ever to take their pastime " ( Chambers , Elizabethan Stage , II : 366 ) ...
Página 9
... performed two emergent motives for travel , incompatible tandem initiatives of London's theatrical cultures ... performing royal presence , they consolidated political gain – recognized the poverty of their tactics at imperial Asian ...
... performed two emergent motives for travel , incompatible tandem initiatives of London's theatrical cultures ... performing royal presence , they consolidated political gain – recognized the poverty of their tactics at imperial Asian ...
Página 30
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Contenido
The glorious empire of the Turks the present terrour of the world | 13 |
Exotic persuasions in the playhouse | 37 |
Tamhurlaine the Great | 41 |
Antony and Cleopatra | 56 |
Imperial poetics in royal and civic spectacle | 68 |
James Stuarts London entry | 70 |
London and the world in mayoral pageantry | 88 |
Mock battles on the Thames | 97 |
The need for a royal amhassador | 147 |
Sir Thomas Roes assignment | 151 |
The London Companys discursive regime | 156 |
The landing in India | 162 |
Representing England at the Moghul court | 167 |
Constructions of India | 185 |
Afterword | 194 |
Notes | 197 |
Interlude Imaging home and travel | 102 |
Thomas Coryate and the invention of tourism | 115 |
The journey East | 132 |
Sir Thomas Roe and the emhassy to India 16151619 | 146 |
Bibliography | 219 |
232 | |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Before Orientalism: London's Theatre of the East, 1576-1626 Richmond Tyler Barbour Vista previa limitada - 2003 |
Before Orientalism: London's Theatre of the East, 1576-1626 Richmond Barbour Sin vista previa disponible - 2009 |
Términos y frases comunes
ambassador Antony and Cleopatra arch Asia Ben Jonson Britain Cambridge University Press Christian Constantinople Coryate Coryate's Crudities cultural Dekker discourse Drama early modern England Early Travels East India Company eastern Edward elephant Elizabethan Embassy Emperor Empire England English engraving euery Europe European exotic figure Generall Historie global Globe Hakluyt Society hath haue Henry honor imperial Indies Inigo Jones Islam Jacobean Jahangir John Jonson King James letter Levant Company London Lord Mayor Maiestie Marlowe Marlowe's Masque Masque of Blackness merchants Moghul Moghul court Orientalism Ottoman Oxford pageant Persian play playhouse praise Prince Queen Renaissance revised edn rhetoric rich Richard Knolles Roe's Roman Rome royal Samuel Purchas self-presentation Shakespeare shew Sir Thomas Roe spectacle spectators stage Stephen Orgel Surat Tamburlaine Terry theatre theatrical Thomas Coriat Thomas Coryate trade trans Traueller Travels in India triumph Turkish Turks Venice vnto Voyage vpon writes York