Book contents
- Frontmatter
- 1 Introduction
- Part I Science and Society
- Part II Disciplines
- Part III Special Themes
- Part IV Non-Western Traditions
- Part V Ramifications and Impacts
- 32 Science and Religion
- 33 Science, Culture, and the Imagination: Enlightenment Configurations
- 34 Science, Philosophy, and the Mind
- 35 Global Pillage: Science, Commerce, and Empire
- 36 Technological and Industrial Change: A Comparative Essay
- Index
- References
35 - Global Pillage: Science, Commerce, and Empire
from Part V - Ramifications and Impacts
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2008
- Frontmatter
- 1 Introduction
- Part I Science and Society
- Part II Disciplines
- Part III Special Themes
- Part IV Non-Western Traditions
- Part V Ramifications and Impacts
- 32 Science and Religion
- 33 Science, Culture, and the Imagination: Enlightenment Configurations
- 34 Science, Philosophy, and the Mind
- 35 Global Pillage: Science, Commerce, and Empire
- 36 Technological and Industrial Change: A Comparative Essay
- Index
- References
Summary
A map is a representation on paper – a picture – you understand picture? – a paper picture – showing, representing the country – yes? – showing your country in miniature – a scaled drawing on paper of – of – of –
Brian Friel, TranslationsAt the conclusion of the Peace of Paris in 1763, British blue-water policy bore some strange fruit in exchanging the sugar island of Gaudeloupe for “quelques arpents de neige” in the Canadian wilderness – leading to much consternation and bitterness between the elder Pitt and the pliant Scotsman, Lord Bute. This was surely the moment when an expansive British Empire was born and, in response, a new wave of French adventures. Thus, we find the self-effacing Louis de Bougainville soon to make his celebrated four-year circumnavigation (1766–9), a superb account of which was swiftly published – although Bougainville lamented, “Ce n’est ni dans les forêts du Canada, ni sur le sein des mers, que l’on se forme á l’art d’écrire.” Nonetheless, unlike the fashionable experience of European naturalists and systematizers who constrained “dans les ombres de leur cabinet … soumettent impérieusement la nature á leurs imaginations,” here was a self-described “voyageur & marin; c’est á dire, un menteur, & un imbécille.” Bougainville’s brilliant tale is as much a romance of rocky shoals, high seas, men overboard, and inevitable scurvy as much as laying-to in sheltered Pacific coves and shallow bays, behind coral shoals and the welcoming arms of Tahitians.
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- Information
- The Cambridge History of Science , pp. 825 - 844Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2003
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