Shipwreck Modernity
Ecologies of Globalization, 1550–1719
Format:Hardback
Publisher:University of Minnesota Press
Published:10th Dec '15
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This hardback is available in another edition too:
- Paperback£23.99(9780816691067)
Shipwreck Modernity engages early modern representations of maritime disaster in order to describe the global experience of ecological crisis. In the wet chaos of catastrophe, sailors sought temporary security as their worlds were turned upside down. Similarly, writers, poets, and other thinkers searched for stability amid the cultural shifts that resulted from global expansion. The ancient master plot of shipwreck provided a literary language for their dislocation and uncertainty.
Steve Mentz identifies three paradigms that expose the cultural meanings of shipwreck in historical and imaginative texts from the mid-sixteenth through the early eighteenth centuries: wet globalization, blue ecology, and shipwreck modernity. The years during which the English nation and its emerging colonies began to define themselves through oceangoing expansion were also a time when maritime disaster occupied sailors, poets, playwrights, sermon makers, and many others. Through coming to terms with shipwreck, these figures adapted to disruptive change.
Traces of shipwreck ecology appear in canonical literature from Shakespeare to Donne to Defoe and also in sermons, tales of survival, amateur poetry, and the diaries of seventeenth-century English sailors. The isolated islands of Bermuda and the perils of divine anger hold central places. Modern sailor-poets including Herman Melville serve as valuable touchstones in the effort to parse the reality and understandings of global shipwreck.
Offering the first ecocritical account of early modern shipwreck narratives, Shipwreck Modernity reveals the surprisingly modern truths to be found in these early stories of ecological collapse.
"A compelling, provocative, even lyrical piece of scholarship that will undoubtedly inaugurate new critical discussions in the fields of maritime humanities, eco-criticism, early modern English literature, and shipwreck studies."—Josiah Blackmore, Harvard University
"Mentz has shaped an account that looks poised to become a key ecocritical text in the years to come."—Glasgow Review of Books
"Steve Mentz offers close and careful readings of early modern texts that are contextualized and scholarly, but also politically engaged."—The Sixteenth Century Journal
"This is a remarkable and valuable scholarly work that offers much beyond its analysis of early modern texts and histories."—Renaissance Quarterly
"A thoughtful exploration of the modalities of how and why culinary practices and tastes changed over time."—Comitatus 48
"Shipwreck Modernity offers useful challenges to early modernists to re- think our periodization schemes, to environmental historians to more fully consider the ocean, and to all readers to ponder how to stay afloat amidst our ecological crises."—Journal of Early Modern History
ISBN: 9780816691036
Dimensions: 216mm x 140mm x 38mm
Weight: unknown
264 pages