Palestra

Um império sazonal: ansiedade e isolamento na Ásia portuguesa

Sala 1.3.33A, Ciências ULisboa

Por Giuseppe Marcocci (University of Oxford).


Sobre o orador:

I studied and taught in Italian universities before taking up my post at Oxford in 2017. I am an early modern historian with a strong interest in the experience of those who lived in the global empires of Spain and Portugal. In particular, the focus of my research and writing has been on imperial ideology, race, and slavery. I have extensively worked in archives and libraries in the Iberian Peninsula, Latin America, France, Italy, the United Kingdom, and the United States. My other major area of interest is in the Iberian religious world, with special regards to the Inquisition, mission, and the agency of converts. My latest book, The Globe on Paper (OUP, 2020), considers historiography as the centre of global interactions in the age of exploration. An examination of the cross-fertilisation of historical writing in the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries, it reconstructs a set of imaginative forms of account worked out from Mexico to the Moluccas and Peru, and from the shops of Venetian printers to the rival courts of Spain and England. This work, as much as the volume Machiavelli, Islam, and the East, which I co-edited with Lucio Biasiori (Palgrave, 2018), is part of an ongoing attempt to complicate current approaches to the geographies of the early modern world. I have never thought of my research topics in isolation. Ultimately, I see my scholarship as dealing with issues of power relations as diffracted through sources and materials produced at a time of change, instability, and weak legitimacy. I teach widely across the history of the early modern world (including specialised papers on Iberia and its overseas possessions), and I welcome enquiries from prospective graduate students interested in working in any aspect of Iberian history from 1450 to 1800.

I am one of the convenors of the Iberian History Seminar and the Reading Group on Iberian History (Medieval & Early Modern), both of which meet at Exeter College, and I greatly enjoy being part of a lively group of students and scholars interested in Iberian History at Oxford. Currently, I am also the Chair of the Oxford Centre for European History. I serve on the editorial board of several academic journals, including the Journal of Early Modern History.

Fonte

11h30
CIUHCT - Centro Interuniversitário de História das Ciências e da Tecnologia