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E-raamat: Hemispheres and Stratospheres: The Idea and Experience of Distance in the International Enlightenment

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Hemispheres and Stratospheres offers eight essays that address the art, literature, science, and politics of distance during the long eighteenth century. This volume celebrates the intercontinental expansiveness of Enlightenment distance culture&;a culture that continues to encourage modern pursuits such as space travel, tourism, telecommunication, multiculturalism, and international research collaboration.

Nowhere is distance so near-at-hand as in Enlightenment culture. Whether in the telescopic surveys of early astronomers, the panoramas of painters, the diaries of travelers, the prospects of landscape architects, or the tales of novelists, distance is never far in the background of the works and deeds of long-eighteenth-century artists, authors, and adventurers. Hemispheres and Stratospheres draws that background into the foreground. Recognizing distance as a central concern of the Enlightenment, this volume offers eight essays on distance in art and literature; on cultural transmission and exchange over distance; and on distance as a topic in science, a theme in literature, and a central issue in modern research methods. Through studies of landscape gardens, architecture, imaginary voyages, transcontinental philosophical exchange, and cosmological poetry, Hemispheres and Stratospheres unfurls the early history of a distance culture that influences our own era of global information exchange, long-haul flights, colossal skyscrapers, and space tourism.

Published by Bucknell University Press. Distributed worldwide by Rutgers University Press.

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In eight wide-ranging essays by prominent scholars, this groundbreaking collection challenges how Enlightenment and long-eighteenth-century researchers need to reassess the interdisciplinary nature, cultural richness, and international scope of this topic. The study ventures into new territories in the international and cultural terrain of distance studies, uncovering uncharted research and future prospects in the digital humanities. -- Mark Pedreira * Professor of English, University of Puerto Rico, Río Piedras * With his characteristic intellectual amplitude, Kevin L. Cope presents in this volume essays on the eighteenth-century prospect in art and literature, the function of distance in Italian architecture, the European travel of two South Indian priests, the dislocations and adaptations of long distance imaginary voyages, and the possible advantages of distant readingamong others. While novel in its core supposition, the volume pays respect to an older, distinguished scholarly orientation that is perfectly in line with our own multidisciplinary moment: the history of ideas. -- John Scanlan * coeditor of The Age of Johnson * "A valuable contribution to the growing body of theories and histories of distance." * The Scriblerian and the Kit-Cats *

Introduction: Hemispheres and Stratospheres: The Idea and Experience of Distance in the International Enlightenment 1(16)
Kevin L. Cope
PART ONE Best Seen at a Distance: The Art of the Far-Away
1 Looking Down: Observations on Elevation, Prospect Vision, and Eighteenth-Century Imagination
17(30)
Roger D. Lund
2 Space and the Meaning of Distance in Bernardo Vittone's Architecture
47(26)
William Stargard
3 Change of Air, Change of Self: Long Distance and Human Adaptability in Imaginary Voyages of the Long Eighteenth Century
73(30)
Barbel Czennia
PART TWO Culture over and as Distance
4 Distant Lands, Distant Races, Distant Cultures: Two Eighteenth-Century South Indian Priests Go to Europe
103(26)
Brijraj Singh
5 Connecting Hemispheres, Playing with Distance: Rammohun Roy, the Indian Transnationalist
129(20)
Chandrava Chakravarty
PART THREE The Nature of Distance
6 New Science, Distant Reading, and Distance as Intersubjectivity
149(22)
Rachel Mann
7 Orbiting Iambs: Enlightenment Cosmology and Conveniently Condensed Immensities
171(26)
Kevin L. Cope
8 Journeys to the Edge: The Idea and Experience of Distance in Archival Research
197(22)
Phyllis Thompson
Acknowledgment 219(2)
Bibliography 221(14)
Notes on Contributors 235(4)
Index 239
KEVIN L. COPE is Adams Professor of English Literature and a member of the comparative literature faculty at Louisiana State University. Among his many books and edited collections are Criteria of Certainty, John Locke Revisited, and In and After the Beginning. He is also editor of the annual journal 16501850: Ideas, Aesthetics, and Inquiries in the Early Modern Era.