Abstract

Early modern observers rarely failed to comment on the perceived diversity of peoples, customs, and languages of Mediterranean societies. This diversity they sought to capture in travel narratives, costume albums, missionary and diplomatic reports, bilingual dictionaries, and a range of other genres of the “contact zone.” Modern scholars, too, have celebrated the early modern Mediterranean's ostensibly multiple, diverse, and even “pluralist,” “cosmopolitan,” or “multicultural” nature. At the same time, in part thanks to the reawakened interest in Braudel's seminal work and in part as a much-needed corrective to the politically current but analytically bankrupt paradigm of “clash of civilizations,” recent studies have also emphasized the region's “shared,” “connected,” “mixed,” “fluid,” “syncretic,” or “hybrid” sociocultural practices. Of course, these two analytical emphases are far from mutually exclusive, as recently underscored by Peregrine Horden and Nicholas Purcell's comprehensive, longue durée model of diversity-in-connectivity. Yet, neither Horden and Purcell's structuralist “new thalassology,” nor other studies of the early modern Mediterranean have offered a systematic account of how “diversity” and “connectivity” as both the flow of social practices and the categories for speaking about them have been articulated through specific institutions and genres.

Highlights

  • Modern observers rarely failed to comment on the perceived diversity of peoples, customs, and languages of Mediterranean societies

  • This diversity they sought to capture in travel narratives, costume albums, missionary and diplomatic reports, bilingual dictionaries, and a range of other genres of the “contact zone.”[1]. Modern scholars, too, have celebrated the early modern Mediterranean’s ostensibly multiple, diverse, and even “pluralist,” “cosmopolitan,” or “multicultural” nature.[2]

  • Neither Horden and Purcell’s structuralist “new thalassology,” nor other studies of the early modern Mediterranean have offered a systematic account of how “diversity” and “connectivity” as both the flow of social practices and the categories for speaking about them have been articulated through specific institutions and genres. To address such processes of articulation, this study looks at the mutual constitution of “diversity” and “connectivity” in one of the paradigmatic institutions of the early modern Mediterranean “contact zone,” namely diplomacy

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Modern observers rarely failed to comment on the perceived diversity of peoples, customs, and languages of Mediterranean societies. In part thanks to the reawakened interest in Braudel’s seminal work and in part as a much-needed corrective to the politically current but analytically bankrupt paradigm of “clash of

10 Fleischer 1986
11 Imber 2002
32 Lewis 2004
50 Alberi 1839
61 Rudt de Collenberg 1982
CONCLUSIONS
Venice

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