Empire, Barbarism, and Civilisation

Empire, Barbarism, and Civilisation
About this book
"The artist William Hodges accompanied Captain Cook on his second voyage to the South Pacific in 1772-5. His extraordinarily vivid images, read against the journals of Cook and his companions, reveal as much about European cultures and historiography as about the peoples they visited. In this book, Harriet Guest discusses Hodges's dramatic landscapes and portraits alongside written accounts of the voyages and in the context of the theories of civilisation which shaped European perceptions - theories drawn from the works of philosophers of the Scottish enlightenment such as Adam Smith and John Millar.
She argues that the voyagers resorted to diverse or incompatible models of progress in successive encounters with different groups of islanders, and shows how these models also structured metropolitan views of the voyagers and of Hodges's work. This fully illustrated study offers a fresh perspective on eighteenth-century representations of gender, colonialism and exploration."--Jacket.
Details
- OL Work ID
- OL4647461W
Subjects
HistoryIn artEarly works to 1800Description and travelDiariesEuropean Foreign public opinionTravel in literatureCook, james, 1728-1779Oceania, discovery and explorationEurope, history, 18th century