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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Elizabeth A. SuttonPublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.560kg ISBN: 9781138245952ISBN 10: 113824595 Pages: 300 Publication Date: 14 October 2016 Audience: College/higher education , General/trade , Tertiary & Higher Education , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviewsA Baker & Taylor Academic Essentials Title in Area/Ethnic Studies, Africa 'This very satisfying case study frames its particulars and adds important new material to the emerging art history about European views of the wider world in the early modern period... Makes insightful arguments as it adds to the growing literature on early European visual ethnography... A fine, well-researched, significant book.' Larry Silver, University of Pennsylvania, USA 'Sutton's book makes an important contribution to the debate about European views of African people in the early modern period, while also providing a very valuable account of De Marees, Claesz and the illustration of travel writing.' Historians of Netherlandish Art 'Early Modern Dutch Prints of Africa is a comprehensive, very well-executed case study in the production of preconceived images and ideas. It deserves to be read by specialists of Dutch art as well as by scholars of early modern encounters and ethnographic representations.' Renaissance Quarterly '...Sutton's book is a welcome invitation to enter a process of defamiliarization in order to undo this process of calcification of thought by transporting the reader to an era in which, as she puts it, the presentation and legitimization of knowledge underwent seismic shifts. ' Sixteenth Century Journal '... Sutton makes a particular contribution to the study of early modern pictorial representations of Africa: a field of research that has remained nearly untouched... In addition to shedding new light on the processes of creating early illustrations of Africa, and showing the constructed nature of images, Sutton gives interesting examples of the importance of these images for subsequent illustrations... Sutton's study offers a fascinating and amply-illustrated account of the birth and development of the visual imagery of Africa...' Journal of Historical Geography "A Baker & Taylor Academic Essentials Title in Area/Ethnic Studies, Africa 'This very satisfying case study frames its particulars and adds important new material to the emerging art history about European views of the wider world in the early modern period... Makes insightful arguments as it adds to the growing literature on early European visual ethnography... A fine, well-researched, significant book.' Larry Silver, University of Pennsylvania, USA 'Sutton’s book makes an important contribution to the debate about European views of African people in the early modern period, while also providing a very valuable account of De Marees, Claesz and the illustration of travel writing.' Historians of Netherlandish Art 'Early Modern Dutch Prints of Africa is a comprehensive, very well-executed case study in the production of preconceived images and ideas. It deserves to be read by specialists of Dutch art as well as by scholars of early modern encounters and ethnographic representations.' Renaissance Quarterly '...Sutton's book is a welcome invitation to enter a process of defamiliarization in order to undo this process of calcification of thought by transporting the reader to an era in which, as she puts it, ""the presentation and legitimization of knowledge underwent seismic shifts.""' Sixteenth Century Journal '... Sutton makes a particular contribution to the study of early modern pictorial representations of Africa: a field of research that has remained nearly untouched... In addition to shedding new light on the processes of creating early illustrations of Africa, and showing the constructed nature of images, Sutton gives interesting examples of the importance of these images for subsequent illustrations... Sutton's study offers a fascinating and amply-illustrated account of the birth and development of the visual imagery of Africa...' Journal of Historical Geography" "A Baker & Taylor Academic Essentials Title in Area/Ethnic Studies, Africa 'This very satisfying case study frames its particulars and adds important new material to the emerging art history about European views of the wider world in the early modern period... Makes insightful arguments as it adds to the growing literature on early European visual ethnography... A fine, well-researched, significant book.' Larry Silver, University of Pennsylvania, USA 'Sutton‘s book makes an important contribution to the debate about European views of African people in the early modern period, while also providing a very valuable account of De Marees, Claesz and the illustration of travel writing.' Historians of Netherlandish Art 'Early Modern Dutch Prints of Africa is a comprehensive, very well-executed case study in the production of preconceived images and ideas. It deserves to be read by specialists of Dutch art as well as by scholars of early modern encounters and ethnographic representations.' Renaissance Quarterly '...Sutton's book is a welcome invitation to enter a process of defamiliarization in order to undo this process of calcification of thought by transporting the reader to an era in which, as she puts it, ""the presentation and legitimization of knowledge underwent seismic shifts.""' Sixteenth Century Journal '... Sutton makes a particular contribution to the study of early modern pictorial representations of Africa: a field of research that has remained nearly untouched... In addition to shedding new light on the processes of creating early illustrations of Africa, and showing the constructed nature of images, Sutton gives interesting examples of the importance of these images for subsequent illustrations... Sutton's study offers a fascinating and amply-illustrated account of the birth and development of the visual imagery of Africa...' Journal of Historical Geography" Author InformationElizabeth A. Sutton is Assistant Professor of Art History at The University of Northern Iowa, USA. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |