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E-raamat: Citizens of the World: Adapting in the Eighteenth Century

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Encounters, whether first or subsequent or whether cultural, economic, or ideological, mark the beginning of an acquaintance and measure both similarities and differences. What happens after an opening encounter is the topic of Citizens of the World: Adapting in the Eighteenth Century. Taking as its point of embarkation awareness of the mutuality of foreignnessof the unfamiliarity that characterizes all parties to a meeting of the minds, ways, or traditionsthis exploratory volume considers the many approaches and strategies to adaptation in the Enlightenment and the long and complex process of reciprocal adjustment that created this enthusiastically outgoing era internationally. The eight essays of this volume examine four varieties of adaptation: the interdisciplinary, in which expanding realms of knowledge collide but cooperate; the transnational, in which longstanding traditions merge and hybridize; the gendered, in which personal identity and public pursuits negotiate; and the general, in which the adapting mentality energizes unprecedented efforts at ingenious recombination. Whether in cast-and-fired pottery or aboard imagined airships, adaptation, the authors in this volume demonstrate, all but defines a century in which the all but implies perpetual adjustment to everything else.

Arvustused

In his introduction to this book, David Fairer announces it as a contribution to 'adaptation studies'. . . .Fairer's argument that the word 'adapt' fundamentally changed meaning in the 18th century is learned . . . In the contributed essays one reads of early balloonists who lost their lives because they could not steer their craft or keep them aloft; punch bowls and punch drinking in 18th-century novels, signs of a newly globalized economy; Jamaican poet Olive Senior's 2007 poems about William Beckford of Fonthill, whose fabulous wealth derived from West Indian sugar; the development of a canon of Vietnamese literature. * CHOICE *

List of Illustrations
ix
Acknowledgments xi
Preface: Surviving the Eighteenth Century xiii
Samara Anne Cahill
Introduction: "All manag'd for the best": Ecology and the Dynamics of Adaptation xxv
David Fairer
PART I INTERDISCIPLINARY ADAPTATIONS
1 The Elusive Image Rising over the Horizon: Re-contextualizing the Legacy of an Eighteenth-Century Aristocrat
3(16)
Gilles Massot
2 Hot Air and Chilly Welcomes: Accidental Arrivals with Balloons and Airships in the Eighteenth Century and Beyond
19(24)
Jessika Wichner
PART II TRANSNATIONAL ADAPTATIONS
3 Wide-Open Hemispheres: Punch Bowls, Punch, and World Citizenship in Eighteenth-Century British Culture
43(26)
Barbel Czennia
4 "The story is now about us": Olive Senior to "England's wealthiest son"
69(18)
Shirley Chew
PART III GENDERED ADAPTATIONS
5 Avast Ye Mateys! There Be Pirates Here---But How Will We Recognize Them?
87(16)
Kathryn Duncan
6 Sea and Mulberry: Hˆ Xuˆn Huong, Nguyˆn Du, and the Establishment of a Vietnamese National Literature
103(24)
Susan Spencer
Nhu Nguyen
Conclusion: The Coziness of Crisis: The Invigorating Enlightenment Art of Adapting to Almost Anything 127(24)
Kevin L. Cope
Bibliography 151(14)
Index 165(6)
About the Contributors 171
Kevin L. Cope is professor at Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge where he is also president of the Faculty Senate.

Samara Anne Cahill is assistant professor of restoration and eighteenth-century English literature at Nanyang Technological University.