Imagining the World: Mythical Belief versus Reality in Global Encounters
By (Author) O. R. Dathorne
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
23rd March 1994
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Geographical discovery and exploration
398.234
Hardback
256
This is a study of the manner in which certain mythical notions of the world become accepted as fact. Dathorne shows how particular European concepts such as El Dorado, the Fountain of Youth, a race of Amazons, and monster (including cannibal) images were first associated with the Orient. After the New World encounter they were repositioned to North and South America. The book examines the way in which Arabs and Africans are conscripted into the view of the world and takes an unusual, non-Eurocentric viewpoint of how Africans journeyed to the New World and Europe, participating in, what may be considered, an early stage of world exploration and discovery. The study concludes by looking at European travel literature from the early journeys of St. Brendan, through the Viking voyages and up to Marco Polo and Sir John Mandeville. In all these instances, the encounters seem to justify mythical belief. Dathorne's interest in the subject is both intellectual and passionate since, coming from Guyana, he was very much part of this malformed Weltschmerz.
A very meticulously researched, extensively documented, and engagingly written identification and analysis of selected verbal and nonverbal texts of European culture that have exercised a powerfully conscious and unconscious role in shaping the ideological forces of Western expansion and in determining the past and present pattern of global encounters.-CLA Journal
Recommended for general and academic libraries at all levels.-Choice
"Recommended for general and academic libraries at all levels."-Choice
"A very meticulously researched, extensively documented, and engagingly written identification and analysis of selected verbal and nonverbal texts of European culture that have exercised a powerfully conscious and unconscious role in shaping the ideological forces of Western expansion and in determining the past and present pattern of global encounters."-CLA Journal
O.R. DATHORNE is Professor of English at the University of Kentucky and Executive Director of the Association of Caribbean Studies. His lastest publications include two seminal studies Black Mind (1974) and Dark Ancestor (1981), a novel Dele's Child (1986), and a book of poems Songs for a New World (1988). Dr. Dathorne is also the editor of Journal of Caribbean Studies.