Writing about Discovery in the Early Modern East Indies

Su Fang Ng author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Cambridge University Press

Published:15th Dec '22

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Writing about Discovery in the Early Modern East Indies cover

This Element puts into dialogue early Portuguese and Malay travel writing of Melaka to re-examine 'discovery' as a cross-cultural trope.

This Element examines the impact of the 1511 Portuguese conquest of the port-kingdom of Melaka on early travel literature. Putting into dialogue accounts from Portuguese, mestiço, and Malay perspectives, this study re-examines early modern 'discovery' as a cross-cultural trope.Portuguese explorations opened the sea-route to Asia, bringing armed trading to the Indian Ocean. This Element examines the impact of the 1511 Portuguese conquest of the port-kingdom of Melaka on early travel literature. Putting into dialogue accounts from Portuguese, mestiço, and Malay perspectives, this study re-examines early modern 'discovery' as a cross-cultural trope. Trade and travel were intertwined while structured by religion. Rather than newness or wonder, Portuguese representations focus on recovering what is known and grafting Asian knowledges-including local histories-onto European epistemologies. Framing Portuguese rule as a continuation of the sultanate, they re-spatialize Melaka into a European city. However, this model is complicated by a second one of accidental discovery facilitated by native agents. For Malay texts too, travel traverses known routes and spaces. Malay travelers insert themselves into foreign spaces by forging new kinship alliances, even as indigenous networks were increasingly disrupted by European incursions.

ISBN: 9781009045865

Dimensions: 228mm x 152mm x 5mm

Weight: 140g

75 pages