The Noble Savage: Allegory of FreedomWilfrid Laurier University Press, 30.04.1990 - 182 Seiten Stelio Cro’s revealing work, arising from his more than half dozen previous books, considers the eighteenth-century Enlightenment in the context of the European experience with, and reaction to, the cultures of America’s original inhabitants. Taking into account Spanish, Italian, French, and English sources, the author describes how the building materials for Rousseau’s allegory of the Noble Savage came from the early Spanish chroniclers of the discovery and conquest of America, the Jesuit Relations of the Paraguay Missions (a Utopia in its own right), the Essais of Montaigne, Italian Humanism, Shakespeare’s Tempest, writers of Spain’s Golden Age, Defoe’s Robinson Crusoe, and the European philosophes. |
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... periods culminating in the composition of Sinapia . The first period includes , chronologically the years from 1492 , the date of the discovery , to 1559 , the date of the Index of the Inquisitor Valdés . The central figures of this period ...
... period , Juan de Mariana published De Rege ( 1599 ) and , almost at the same time , the Jesuits founded the Reductions in Paraguay . This represents the overlapping of the experimental utopia of the first period into the literary utopia ...
... period from 1682 to 1767 encompasses that period during which the Spanish officials came to perceive the noble savage of the Reductions as a rebel within the state , a threat to the rest of the colonies and , eventually , as an enemy ...
Inhalt
The Roots of the Noble Savage | 1 |
The Return of Ulysses and the Spanish Utopia | 13 |
Chapter 2 | 57 |
Urheberrecht | |
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