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  • Perhaps unexpectedly, English travel writing during the long eighteenth century reveals a discourse of global civility. By bringing together representations of the then already familiar Ottoman Empire and the largely unknown South Pacific, the author adopts a uniquely global perspective and demonstrates how cross-cultural encounters were framed by Enlightenment philosophy, global interconnections, and even-handed exchanges across cultural divides. In so doing, this book shows that both travel and travel-writing from the seventeenth to the nineteenth centuries were much more complex and multi-layered than reductive Eurocentric histories often suggest. (xsd:string)
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?:dateModified
  • 2021 (xsd:gyear)
?:datePublished
  • 2021 (xsd:gyear)
?:doi
  • 10.14361/9783839455838 ()
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  • true (xsd:boolean)
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  • en (xsd:string)
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  • 978-3-8394-5583-8 ()
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  • 2702-9328 ()
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?:name
  • Representations of Global Civility: English Travellers in the Ottoman Empire and the South Pacific, 1636-1863 (xsd:string)
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  • Dissertation (xsd:string)
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  • GESIS-SSOAR (xsd:string)
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?:urn
  • urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-92243-3 ()
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  • 5 (xsd:string)