Description
About the Author
Meredith Martin is associate professor at New York University. She is an art historian specializing in French art, architecture, empire, and intercultural exchange from the late seventeenth to early nineteenth centuries. Gillian Weiss is associate professor at Case Western Reserve University. She is a historian specializing in early modern France, its relations with the Islamic world, and Mediterranean slavery.
Reviews
"A dazzling collection of early modern artworks and a major interdisciplinary achievement between social history and art history that uncovers, for the first time, how and why the French Sun King Louis XIV shaped his propaganda on the enslavement of Mediterranean Muslims. A masterpiece!"-M'hamed Oualdi, Sciences Po, Paris;; "Superbly illustrated, The Sun King at Sea is a tour de force of the historical imagination that deploys the resources of social and cultural history and of material and visual culture to reveal and portray the enslavement of Muslims for Louis XIV's Mediterranean galley fleet. Martin and Weiss's approach to a disturbing subject too long hidden in plain sight is unflinchingly illuminating yet humane."-Colin Jones, Queen Mary University of London;; "This is not only an original and archivally rich study but also an unsettling and necessary one. The authors combine rigorous historical research with fresh and insightful visual analysis to chronicle the violence, coercion, and suppression that underpinned the fabric of Louis XIV's navy and the diplomatic, material, and symbolic structures of his reign. Martin and Weiss's book is a must-read for all students and scholars of the Sun King's court as well as those interested in slavery, maritime power, and society in early modern Europe."--Mark Ledbury, Director of the Power Institute, The University of Sydney; "An indispensable and original book that centers the Mediterranean Sea in the visual and ornamental imaginary of the so-called Grand Siecle; interprets maritime vessels as pluralistic micro-societies and vehicles of royal propaganda, and locates the roots of Orientalism in an early-modern Turquerie complicated by the longstanding presence of slavery and Islam in France. A must-read!" -Anne Lafont, directrice d'etudes a l'EHESS
Book Information
ISBN 9781606067307
Author Meredith Martin
Format Hardback
Page Count 256
Imprint Getty Research Institute,U.S.
Publisher Getty Trust Publications