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14 - Travel writing and ethnography

from Part 3 - Topics

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 May 2006

Peter Hulme
Affiliation:
University of Essex
Tim Youngs
Affiliation:
Nottingham Trent University
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Summary

The ethnographic impulse

The description of peoples, their nature, customs, religion, forms of government, and language, is so embedded in the travel writing produced in Europe after the sixteenth century that one assumes ethnography to be essential to the genre. In England this assumption became part of the justification for the most representative form of this writing, the travel collections published from the sixteenth to the nineteenth centuries. Already in 1577 one of the first of these collectors, Richard Willes, had announced that all branches of learning have their 'special times' of flourishing, and 'now' was the time of geography. In Renaissance learning geography, or cosmography, acted as an encyclopaedic synthesis for the description of the world. Therefore, the description of peoples became the empirical foundation for a general rewriting of ‘natural and moral history’ within a new cosmography made possible by the navigations of the period. As Awnsham and John Churchill wrote in the preface to their 1704 Collection of Voyages and Travels:

What was Cosmography before these discoveries, but an imperfect fragment of science, scarce deserving so good a name? . . . But now Geography and Hydrography have received some perfection by the pains of so many mariners and travellers . . . Natural and Moral History is embellished with the most beneficial increase of so many thousands of plants . . . drugs and spices . . . beasts, birds and fishes . . . minerals, mountains and waters . . . [and] such unaccountable diversities of climates and men, and in them complexions, tempers, habits, manners, politicks and religions . . .

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2002

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