Indography Writing the "Indian" in early modern England /

Indography considers literary and non-literary representations of Indians in early modern English writing in relation to processes of globalization and race formation.

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Bibliographic Details
Group Author: Harris, Jonathan Gil.
Published:
Literature type: Electronic Software eBook
Language: English
Series: Signs of race
Subjects:
Online Access: http://www.palgraveconnect.com/doifinder/10.1057/9781137090768
Summary: Indography considers literary and non-literary representations of Indians in early modern English writing in relation to processes of globalization and race formation.
Item Description: Electronic book text.
Epublication based on: 9780230341371.
Carrier Form: 280 p.
ISBN: 9780230341371
9781137090768 :
1137090766 :
CLC: I712.065
Contents: Introduction: Forms of Indography-- J.G.Harris PART I: INDOLOGY: DISCOVERY, ETHNOGRAPHY, PATHOLOGY How To Make an Indian: Religion, Trade, and Translation in the Legends of Moncaide and Gaspar da Gama-- B.Malieckal Looking for Loss, Anticipating Absence: Imagining Indians in the Archives and Depictions of Roanoke's Lost Colony-- G.Caison From First Encounter to 'Fiery Oven': The Effacement of the New England Indian in Mourt's Relation and Histories of the Pequot War-- T.Cartelli Trafficking in Tangomockomindge: Ethnographic Materials in Harriot's A Briefe and True Report-- K.Boettcher Translation and Identity in the Dialogues in the English and Malaiane Languages-- M.Walter Playing Indian: John Smith, Pocahontas, and a Dialogue about a Chain of Pearl-- K.Robertson Tobacco, Union, and The Indianized English-- C.Rustici Sick Ethnography: Recording the Indian and the Ill English Body-- J.G.Harris PART II: INDOPOESIS: POETRY, DRAMA, ROMANCE Spenser's 'Men of Inde': Mythologizing the Indian through the Genealogy of Faeries-- M.Hollings From Lunacy to Faith: Orlando's Own Private India in Robert Greene's Orlando Furioso-- J.W.Stone 'Enter Orlando with a scarf before his face': Indians, Moors, and the Properties of Racial Transformation in Robert Greene's The Historie of Orlando Furioso-- G.Hollis 'Does this become you, Princess?': East Indian Ethopoetics in John Fletcher's The Island Princess-- J.Tran Playing an Indian Queen: Neoplatonism, Ethnography, and The Temple of Love-- A.Sen Made in India: How Meriton Latroon Became an Englishman-- C.Nocentelli 'A Well-Born Race': Aphra Behn's The Widow Ranter-- or, The History of Bacon in Virginia and the Place of Proximity-- S.Eaton Afterword: Naming and Un-naming 'all the Indies': How India Became Hindustan-- J.G.Singh.