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dc.contributor.authorBak, Greg.en_US
dc.date.accessioned2014-10-21T12:36:13Z
dc.date.available2001
dc.date.issued2001en_US
dc.identifier.otherAAINQ66657en_US
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10222/55786
dc.descriptionThis thesis analyzes English representations of Muslims between 1575 and 1625, charting a chronology of intersections of material, political, and cultural interests. Although the focus is upon representations of Islam drawn from the general culture of London, in order to decode these consideration is given to representations of Islam made in the course of commercial and diplomatic contact between the English and Muslims of the Ottoman and Moroccan empires.en_US
dc.descriptionIn 1575 the English were engaged in an ongoing struggle with Spain, a struggle which had cultural as well as commercial, diplomatic, and military consequences. On account of repeated embargoes at Spanish-controlled Antwerp, the trading hub of Western Europe, the English were forced to take their wares directly to northern and southern Europe, and beyond. Queen Elizabeth, through a canny use of conditions attached to grants of monopoly, imposed upon the emerging commercial infrastructure a network of diplomatic contacts. Among these were embassies established at Istanbul and Marrakech, through which Elizabeth attempted to create anti-Spanish military alliances with the Ottoman and Sa'adian sultans.en_US
dc.descriptionThe breadth of vision of Elizabethan commercial culture is impressive, but Elizabethan literary culture was even more aggressively innovative and expansive. As writers such as Christopher Marlowe, George Peele, and William Shakespeare transformed the literary forms of their homeland they captured the farthest reaches of English travel and commerce, granting Islam a prominent place in the symbolic landscape of English general culture. In keeping with the openness towards Islam demonstrated in Elizabethan commerce and diplomacy, literary representations of Islam of the last quarter of the sixteenth century were by turns positive and affiliating.en_US
dc.descriptionEven prior to the death of Elizabeth I Anglo-Islamic relations had cooled. With a stable commercial infrastructure in place and the Spanish threat in decline, English culture became amenable to engagement with Catholic Europe. Under King James I English foreign policy became more conciliatory towards the Spanish, a shift in policy which resonated with the increasingly negative representations of Islam that appeared in English general culture during the first quarter of the seventeenth century.en_US
dc.descriptionThesis (Ph.D.)--Dalhousie University (Canada), 2001.en_US
dc.languageengen_US
dc.publisherDalhousie Universityen_US
dc.publisheren_US
dc.subjectHistory, European.en_US
dc.subjectTheater.en_US
dc.subjectLiterature, English.en_US
dc.titleEnglish representations of Islam at the turn of the century: Islam imagined and Islam experienced, 1575--1625.en_US
dc.typetexten_US
dc.contributor.degreePh.D.en_US
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