Fractured Visions, New Horizons: Debates in Eighteenth-Century Studies Beyond German Studies
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 December 2023
Summary
THE PAST TWO years have brought many changes to academic life, one of which promises to be an organizational revamp and opening-up of US-based eighteenth-century studies, at least in their representation through ASECS. Two panels at this year's conference (Baltimore, 2022) are a case in point: the “Presidential Session Roundtable: New Horizons in Enlightenment Studies,” and “Visions of Empire.” While the panelists on the former individually and collectively wrestled with domineering whiteness as a paradigm defining the hitherto accepted scope of Enlightenment reach, the latter offered new impulses for interdisciplinary turns to the global: Historian Junko Takeda offered considerations on cultural erasure of premodern Armenians and their diaspora in the Americas and argued for a reframing of imperial power structures within trade networks (and beyond the carriers of national territory and languages), while literary scholars Hanna Roman and Melanie Conroy urged the reexamination of well-worn tropes in the Western imagination, namely the sunken island of Atlantis and maps, respectively. Roman showed that, while Atlantis is today considered to be thoroughly mythological, it has revealed tremendous power in terms of engineering and reengineering narratives of dominance as well as images of the global North (in juxtaposition with the global South) and thus, ultimately, of European “greatness” and—we might add—mythological whiteness. I n the end, Roman put forth an overarching plea for new stories of origin that, unlike the biblical text or sciences with their data and experiments, remain stories of imagination, which, however, encourage us to see the world—and its mythological translations—through a material remnant or illusion, namely a mysterious rock buried beneath an ocean. C onroy explained how three different types of maps circulating in the eighteenth century shaped the visual field for perceiving the world, ultimately establishing scale, dominance, and hierarchies of importance in a visually persuasive though manipulative manner. Finally, Elizabeth Cross cast a critical eye on the French empire—from the perspective of the Indian Ocean world. Reminding listeners not only of the fragile nature of empires whose power postures are always betraying anxieties of impending loss, she delineated how the French empire was subordinated, by both British colonial power and Indian inheritance, and how the French had to assert their power through trade hegemony.
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- Goethe Yearbook 30 , pp. 115 - 118Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2023