- Home
- Connected Histories in the Early Modern World
- history
- Remapping Travel Narratives, 1000-1700
Remapping Travel Narratives, 1000-1700
To the East and Back Again
Edited by Montserrat Piera
Series: Connected Histories in the Early Modern World
316 Pages, Trim size: 156 x 234 mm
- Hardcover
- 9781942401599
- Published: July 2018
- eBook (PDF)
- 9781942401605
- Published: July 2018
With a specific focus on travel narratives, this collection looks at how Islamic and eastern cultural threads were weaved, through travel and trading networks, into Western European/Christian visual culture and discourse and, ultimately, into the artistic explosion which has been labeled the “Renaissance.” Scholars from across humanities disciplines examine Islamic, Jewish, Spanish, Italian, and English works from a truly comparative and non-parochial perspective, to explore the transfer through travel of cultural and religious values and artistic and scientific practices, from the eleventh to the seventeenth centuries.
During this period travel, military conquest and trade through the Mediterranean placed Western European citizens and merchants in contact with Islamic and eastern technology and culture, and travel narratives illustrate the converging and pragmatic dynamics of cultural acceptance. Perhaps the spread of “Renaissance” values and beliefs might have followed a trajectory the reverse of what is generally assumed, and that salient aspects of Renaissance culture traveled from the fringes of Islamic and eastern cultures to the midst of hegemonically Christian polities.
This book is available as Open Access.
Montserrat Piera is Associate Professor of Medieval Spanish at Temple University. She has published on a wide range of topics from chivalry texts to early modern women writers.