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Infelicities : Representations of the Exotic by Peter Mason β€” book cover

Infelicities : Representations of the Exotic

by Peter Mason
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Overview

When European travelers went overseas in the sixteenth century, they encountered unfamiliar lands, peoples, and sights. These travelers had to re-present these encounters to Europeans for whom they stood for the unfamiliar β€” the "exotic." But the exotic, according to Peter Mason, is not something that exists prior to its "discovery." Rather, he points out, it is the very act of "discovery" that produces the exotic as such.

In Infelicities Peter Mason explores the texts, paintings, drawings, photographs, and museum displays in which the exotic has been represented from the early modern period to the present. He describes the unique iconography that Europeans developed to represent the exotic and the means they employed to display it once artifacts were brought to Europe. In both instances, the exotic object is taken out of its original context and given a meaning and significance it never had; this new meaning and significance, Mason argues, are derived from the imposition of European cultural values and the need to recontextualize the object in a European setting.

To differentiate the "exotic" from the "other," Mason says that in understanding the "other" there is engagement and interchange; in encountering the "exotic" it is a one-sided effort at understanding: the exotic object never gives up its meaning. The title of the book, Infelicities, comes from philosopher J. L. Austin, who used the term to refer to what happens when something goes wrong on the occasion of an act of utterance. For Mason, this "doctrine of infelicities" seems applicable to European encounters with the exotic and the efforts to represent thoseencounters.

About the Author, Peter Mason

Peter Mason read classical studies at Oxford and took his Ph.D. in anthropology at the University of Utrecht. He is the co-author, with Florike Egmond, of The Mammoth and the Mouse: Microhistory and Morphology, also available from Johns Hopkins.

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Editorials

Booknews

Explores texts, paintings, drawings, photos, and museum displays in which the exotic sights and peoples of the New World have been represented by Europeans from the early modern period to the present. Describes the unique iconography that Europeans developed to convey the exotic and the means they employed to display it once artefacts were brought to Europe, and argues that, in both instances, the exotic object is taken out of its context and given a meaning and significance it never had. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.

Book Details

Published
December 15, 1998
Publisher
The Johns Hopkins University Press
Pages
288
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780801858802

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