The five hundredth anniversary of Columbus's first transatlantic
voyage has provoked an outpouring of scholarship on how European
exploration and colonization affected America. This book of eleven
essays from leading scholars in the fields of intellectual and
cultural history reverses that trend by focusing on the ways in
which contact with the Americas transformed European thought.
The result of an international conference sponsored by the John
Carter Brown Library, this collection addresses the impact of
Spanish, French, and English experiences in the New World. The
essays consider whether and how knowledge of America changed the
mental world of European thinkers as reflected in their
understanding of history, literature, linguistics, religion, and
the sciences.
In assessing the process by which Europeans sought to understand
America, this volume responds to issues raised by Sir John Elliott
nearly a generation ago, and the collection concludes with an essay
in which Elliott reflects on the scholarship of the last
twenty-five years on this subject. The contributors are David
Armitage, Peter Burke, Luca Codignola, J. H. Elliott, Christian
Feest, Roland Greene, John M. Headley, Karen Ordahl Kupperman,
Henry Lowood, Sabine MacCormack, David Quint, and Richard C.
Simmons.