Article ID: CBB580025067

Too Much to Tell: Narrative Styles of the First Descriptions of the Natural World of the Indies (2017)

unapi

Describing a Mundus Novus was a very singular task in the sixteenth century. It was an effort shaped by a permanent inherent tension between novelty and normality, between the immense variety of new facts (some extraordinary) and the demand of credibility. How did these inner strains affect the narrative style of the first descriptions of the natural world of ‘the Indies’? How were the first European observers of the nature of America able to simultaneously transmit the idea of immensity and regularity (mundus), and that of novelty (novus)? How did they attempt to describe new worlds knowing that there was a lot – perhaps too much – to tell? This paper focuses not on the much-discussed epistemological issues related to those questions, but on their narrative and stylistic consequences. We argue that the first Europeans meeting the new realities of the Americas or India had to meet new challenges, and these translated into texts with specific characteristics. Thus, their first descriptions are essentially different from the texts about the natural world that were written before or after the ‘discovery’. We show that they adopted very specific discursive approaches, and were deeply influenced by the credibility strategies of the medical profession in which they had been trained.

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Authors & Contributors
Acosta, Cristóbal de
Clarke, Sabine
Cordero del Campillo, Miguel
Ette, Ottmar
Figueroa, Marcelo Fabián
Jensen, Niklas Thode
Journals
Asclepio: Archivo Iberoamericano de Historia de la Medicina
Colonial Latin American Review
History of the Human Sciences
HOST: Journal of History of Science and Technology
Journal of Early Modern History
Journal of the National Medical Association
Publishers
Universidad de Salamanca
Agencia Española de Cooperación Internacional
Harvard University Press
Lexington Books
Manchester University Press
University of Chicago Press
Concepts
Medicine
Colonialism
Spain, colonies
Primary literature (historical sources)
Imperialism
Natural history
People
Fernández de Oviedo, Gonzalo
Humboldt, Alexander von
López de Gómara, Francisco
Oviedo y Valdés, Gonzalo Fernández
Time Periods
16th century
19th century
18th century
17th century
20th century
20th century, late
Places
West Indies
East Indies
Spain
Europe
Great Britain
Caribbean
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