Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of illustrations
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- A note on spelling and vocabulary
- 1 In Search of India: the empire of Vijayanagara through European eyes
- 2 Marco Polo's India and the Latin Christian tradition
- 3 Establishing lay science: the merchant and the humanist
- 4 Ludovico de Varthema: the curious traveller at the time of Vasco da Gama and Columbus
- 5 The Portuguese and Vijayanagara: politics, religion and classication
- 6 The practice of ethnography: Indian customs and castes
- 7 The social and political order: Vijayanagara decoded
- 8 The historical dimension: from native traditions to European orientalism
- 9 The missionary discovery of South Indian religion: opening the doors of idolatry
- 10 From humanism to scepticism: the independent traveller in the seventeenth century
- Conclusion: Before Orientalism
- Appendix
- Bibliography
- Index
- Past and Present Publications
9 - The missionary discovery of South Indian religion: opening the doors of idolatry
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 October 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of illustrations
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- A note on spelling and vocabulary
- 1 In Search of India: the empire of Vijayanagara through European eyes
- 2 Marco Polo's India and the Latin Christian tradition
- 3 Establishing lay science: the merchant and the humanist
- 4 Ludovico de Varthema: the curious traveller at the time of Vasco da Gama and Columbus
- 5 The Portuguese and Vijayanagara: politics, religion and classication
- 6 The practice of ethnography: Indian customs and castes
- 7 The social and political order: Vijayanagara decoded
- 8 The historical dimension: from native traditions to European orientalism
- 9 The missionary discovery of South Indian religion: opening the doors of idolatry
- 10 From humanism to scepticism: the independent traveller in the seventeenth century
- Conclusion: Before Orientalism
- Appendix
- Bibliography
- Index
- Past and Present Publications
Summary
Throughout the sixteenth century Europeans in India and elsewhere overseas had elaborated an ethnological language with which they could approach human diversity in its natural setting through an immediate use of common analytical categories. They had also captured a historical vision which, in its inclusion of alien traditions, went far beyond previous European rhetorical conventions. The gap that still separated discourse generated overseas and discourse at home now offered ample room for the creation of orientalist clicheâs, but the power of the new historical vision was precisely its ability to do the opposite, to historicize Europe's other and thus challenge any clicheâs. The answer had to be an intellectual debate in which empirical issues could not be ignored.
In South India, Federici had witnessed, along with the end of the old and most splendid Vijayanagara, also the end of a phase in the history of European attitudes towards gentile civilization. Of course a rump kingdom of Vijayanagara survived for a few decades in the Indian hinterland and, perhaps more important, the idea of a mythical dharmic kingdom remained central to the political imagination of Hindu southern India. But the context had been transformed. Now European travellers confronted the problem of how to grapple with a civilization which had lost its political centre.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Travel and Ethnology in the RenaissanceSouth India through European Eyes, 1250–1625, pp. 308 - 348Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2000