In a beautifully crafted narrative that transports the reader from
the salons of Europe to the shores of Tahiti, Harry Liebersohn
examines the transformation of global knowledge during the great
age of scientific exploration. He moves beyond the traditional
focus on British and French travelers to include Germans, Russians,
and some Americans, as well as the Tahitian, Hawaiian, and other
Pacific islanders they encountered. Germany gets special attention
because its travelers epitomized the era's cosmopolitanism and its
philosophers engaged most fully in a multicultural understanding of
humanity.
Famous adventurers like Captain Cook make appearances, but it's
the observations of such naturalists as Philibert Commerson, George
Forster, and Adelbert von Chamisso that helped most to generate a
new understanding of these far-flung societies. These European
travelers saw non-Europeans neither as "savages" nor as projections
of colonial fantasies. Instead the explorers accumulated a rich
storehouse of perceptions through negotiations with patrons at
home, collaborators abroad, salon philosophers, and missionary
rivals.
Liebersohn illuminates the transformative nature of human
connections. He examines the expectations these servants of empire
brought to the peoples they encountered, and acknowledges the
effects of Oceanian behaviors, including unexpected notions of
sexuality, on the Europeans. Equally important, he details the
reception of these travelers upon their return home.
An unforgettable voyage filled with delightful characters,
dramatic encounters, and rich cultural details, "The Travelers'
World" heralds a moment of intellectual preparation for the modern
global era.We now travel effortlessly to distant places, but the
questions about perception, truth, and knowledge that these
intercontinental mediators faced still resonate.
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