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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Christina H. Lee , Professor Ann Rosalind Jones , Professor Jyotsna Singh , Professor Mihoko SuzukiPublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Edition: New edition Dimensions: Width: 15.60cm , Height: 1.40cm , Length: 23.40cm Weight: 0.589kg ISBN: 9781409408505ISBN 10: 1409408507 Pages: 242 Publication Date: 12 September 2012 Audience: College/higher education , General/trade , Tertiary & Higher Education , General Format: Hardback 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 ContentsReviews'... a wonderful example of careful, thoughtful scholarship. ... The essays are so well-chosen and well-arranged that the book can be read straight from beginning to end as a single, cohesive work.' Terrae Incognitae 'The essays in Lee's collection focus mainly on Spanish and Portuguese texts and thereby expand our knowledge of the Early Modern's encounters with the racial-cultural Other, in this case the Far East. Essays like Koss's in the volume are particularly fascinating for their focus on cultural productions and their politics of editing and adaptation. As a person familiar only with English textual materials on Asia, I was much benefited through Lee's volume, as I discovered the wealth of work on China.' Seventeenth Century News 'A splendid collection of perceptive essays. The volume fills a gap in current scholarship on European-Asian cultural exchange by raising key questions about global inequalities and proposing important arguments about the transpacific age. This volume brings together scholars from a range of disciplines to examine Western European knowledge and imaginations of a Sino-centered Far East before British and Dutch domination in the region.' Alexander C. Y. Huang, George Washington University, USA 'Western Visions will make even seasoned historians more deeply aware of the wealth of primary and secondary sources--including cartographic sources--all too often overlooked in studies of East/West exchange in the early modern period. Professor Lee's volume is intelligently designed; the essays are savvy, original, and refreshingly free of nation-centered parochialisms. This volume should be in the library of every serious historian of transpacific cultural exchange.' Martin Powers, University of Michigan 'Offering wide-ranging scrutiny of Iberian interactions with the Far East, this very practical anthology makes a valuable contribution to early modern studies collections; it models the engagement of materials specifically relevant '... a wonderful example of careful, thoughtful scholarship. ... The essays are so well-chosen and well-arranged that the book can be read straight from beginning to end as a single, cohesive work.' Terrae Incognitae 'The essays in Lee's collection focus mainly on Spanish and Portuguese texts and thereby expand our knowledge of the Early Modern's encounters with the racial-cultural Other, in this case the Far East. Essays like Koss's in the volume are particularly fascinating for their focus on cultural productions and their politics of editing and adaptation. As a person familiar only with English textual materials on Asia, I was much benefited through Lee's volume, as I discovered the wealth of work on China.' Seventeenth Century News 'A splendid collection of perceptive essays. The volume fills a gap in current scholarship on European-Asian cultural exchange by raising key questions about global inequalities and proposing important arguments about the ""transpacific age."" This volume brings together scholars from a range of disciplines to examine Western European knowledge and imaginations of a Sino-centered Far East before British and Dutch domination in the region.' Alexander C. Y. Huang, George Washington University, USA ’Western Visions will make even seasoned historians more deeply aware of the wealth of primary and secondary sources--including cartographic sources--all too often overlooked in studies of East/West exchange in the early modern period. Professor Lee’s volume is intelligently designed; the essays are savvy, original, and refreshingly free of nation-centered parochialisms. This volume should be in the library of every serious historian of transpacific cultural exchange.’ Martin Powers, University of Michigan 'Offering wide-ranging scrutiny of Iberian interactions with the Far East, this very practical anthology makes a valuable contribution to early modern studies collections; it models the engagement of materials specifically relevant '... a wonderful example of careful, thoughtful scholarship. ... The essays are so well-chosen and well-arranged that the book can be read straight from beginning to end as a single, cohesive work.' Terrae Incognitae 'The essays in Lee's collection focus mainly on Spanish and Portuguese texts and thereby expand our knowledge of the Early Modern's encounters with the racial-cultural Other, in this case the Far East. Essays like Koss's in the volume are particularly fascinating for their focus on cultural productions and their politics of editing and adaptation. As a person familiar only with English textual materials on Asia, I was much benefited through Lee's volume, as I discovered the wealth of work on China.' Seventeenth Century News 'A splendid collection of perceptive essays. The volume fills a gap in current scholarship on European-Asian cultural exchange by raising key questions about global inequalities and proposing important arguments about the transpacific age. This volume brings together scholars from a range of disciplines to examine Western European knowledge and imaginations of a Sino-centered Far East before British and Dutch domination in the region.' Alexander C. Y. Huang, George Washington University, USA 'Western Visions will make even seasoned historians more deeply aware of the wealth of primary and secondary sources--including cartographic sources--all too often overlooked in studies of East/West exchange in the early modern period. Professor Lee's volume is intelligently designed; the essays are savvy, original, and refreshingly free of nation-centered parochialisms. This volume should be in the library of every serious historian of transpacific cultural exchange.' Martin Powers, University of Michigan 'Offering wide-ranging scrutiny of Iberian interactions with the Far East, this very practical anthology makes a valuable contribution to early modern studies collections; it models the engagement of materials specifically relevant to transpacific research and also provides scholars with a fifteen-page bibliography of manuscript, primary, and secondary sources.' Renaissance Quarterly '... a fine collection of essays that present research that takes various unique approaches. The essays are well researched and lucidly written.' Sixteenth Century Journal 'This is an impressive collection that is marked by a genuine unity of topic and focus. Because of this, the book as a whole and not just the individual chapters, should be of interest to scholars, and Christina Lee is to be commended for orchestrating such a useful collection that sheds light on an often neglected aspect of European expansion.' Journal of Early Modern History "'... a wonderful example of careful, thoughtful scholarship. ... The essays are so well-chosen and well-arranged that the book can be read straight from beginning to end as a single, cohesive work.' Terrae Incognitae 'The essays in Lee's collection focus mainly on Spanish and Portuguese texts and thereby expand our knowledge of the Early Modern's encounters with the racial-cultural Other, in this case the Far East. Essays like Koss's in the volume are particularly fascinating for their focus on cultural productions and their politics of editing and adaptation. As a person familiar only with English textual materials on Asia, I was much benefited through Lee's volume, as I discovered the wealth of work on China.' Seventeenth Century News 'A splendid collection of perceptive essays. The volume fills a gap in current scholarship on European-Asian cultural exchange by raising key questions about global inequalities and proposing important arguments about the ""transpacific age."" This volume brings together scholars from a range of disciplines to examine Western European knowledge and imaginations of a Sino-centered Far East before British and Dutch domination in the region.' Alexander C. Y. Huang, George Washington University, USA ’Western Visions will make even seasoned historians more deeply aware of the wealth of primary and secondary sources--including cartographic sources--all too often overlooked in studies of East/West exchange in the early modern period. Professor Lee’s volume is intelligently designed; the essays are savvy, original, and refreshingly free of nation-centered parochialisms. This volume should be in the library of every serious historian of transpacific cultural exchange.’ Martin Powers, University of Michigan 'Offering wide-ranging scrutiny of Iberian interactions with the Far East, this very practical anthology makes a valuable contribution to early modern studies collections; it models the engagement of materials specifically relevant" Author InformationChristina H. Lee is Research Scholar with Continuing Appointment in the Department of Spanish and Portuguese at Princeton University, USA. Ricardo Padron, Christina H. Lee, Liam Matthew Brockey, Nicholas Koss, Robert Richmond Ellis, Haruko Natawa Ward, Juan Gil, Tatiana Seijas, Marco Musillo, Mayu Fujikawa. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |