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    • Publisher:
      Cambridge University Press
      Publication date:
      20 October 2016
      19 October 2016
      ISBN:
      9781316711040
      9781107166448
      9781316617502
      Dimensions:
      (228 x 152 mm)
      Weight & Pages:
      0.79kg, 412 Pages
      Dimensions:
      (229 x 152 mm)
      Weight & Pages:
      0.65kg, 416 Pages
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    Book description

    In this major study, the history of the French and British trading empires in the early modern Mediterranean is used as a setting to test a new approach to the history of ignorance: how can we understand the very act of ignoring - in political, economic, religious, cultural and scientific communication - as a fundamental trigger that sets knowledge in motion? Zwierlein explores whether the Scientific Revolution between 1650 and 1750 can be understood as just one of what were in fact many simultaneous epistemic movements and considers the role of the European empires in this phenomenon. Deconstructing central categories like the mercantilist 'national', the exchange of 'confessions' between Western and Eastern Christians and the bridging of cultural gaps between European and Ottoman subjects, Zwierlein argues that understanding what was not known by historical agents can be just as important as the history of knowledge itself.

    Reviews

    'Imperial Unknowns is a thoroughly fascinating book. Zwierlein has succeeded in linking the history of mercantilism, religion, historical knowledge and science in the Mediterranean, and he has demonstrated convincingly that a study of what historical actors did not know is as important as the study of what they did know. … In addition, Imperial Unknowns represents an important contribution to Mediterranean historiography.'

    Dzavid Dzanic Source: Mediterranean Historical Review

    'Cornel Zwierlein’s Imperial Unknowns is the first detailed study of British-French relations in the Mediterranean basin. … The book is lucid and carefully referenced: it is magisterial in its breadth. … it remains essential reading for every student of the early modern Mediterranean.'

    Nabil Matar Source: American Historical Review

    'This book is a highly ambitious, complex, challenging, and genuine attempt at engaging with interdisciplinary developments within the investigation of the 'history of ignorance(s) in late medieval and early modern times'.'

    Maria Fusaro Source: German Historical Institute London Bulletin

    'The approach to take the Mediterranean space as the starting point for a comparative French-British history of knowledge has many merits without doubt, the amount of findings is impressive.'

    Christian Windler Source: translated from Historische Zeitschrift

    'This study demonstrates in an impressive way and with a stupendous [or amazing] erudition [or scholarship] that the question for forms of ignorance and how men and women of the past were coping with the borders of their knowledge can lead to new research questions.'

    Mark Häberlein Source: translated from Zeitschrift für Historische Forschung

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    Contents

    • 1 - Politics and Economy: Nationalizing Economics
      pp 20-116

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