ABSTRACT

Terra Australis - the southern land - was one of the most widespread concepts in European geography from the sixteenth to the eighteenth centuries, although the notion of a land mass in the southern seas had been prevalent since classical antiquity. Despite this fact, there has been relatively little sustained scholarly work on European concepts of Terra Australis or the intellectual background to European voyages of discovery and exploration to Australia in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Through interdisciplinary scholarly contributions, ranging across history, the visual arts, literature and popular culture, this volume considers the continuities and discontinuities between the imagined space of Terra Australis and its subsequent manifestation. It will shed new light on familiar texts, people and events - such as the Dutch and French explorations of Australia, the Batavia shipwreck and the Baudin expedition - by setting them in unexpected contexts and alongside unfamiliar texts and people. The book will be of interest to, among others, intellectual and cultural historians, literary scholars, historians of cartography, the visual arts, women's and post-colonial studies.

chapter 1|8 pages

Perceptions

chapter 3|16 pages

The Roman South

chapter 4|22 pages

Meanings of the South

From the Mappaemundi to Shakespeare's Othello

chapter 5|28 pages

Terra Australis, Jave la Grande and Australia

Identity Problems and Fiction

chapter 6|24 pages

Mapping Terra Australis in the French Seventeenth Century

The Mémoires of the Abbé Jean Paulmier

chapter 7|30 pages

Ceremonial Encounters

Spanish Perceptions of the South Pacific, 1567–1794

chapter 8|20 pages

Naming and Shaming

The Baudin Expedition and the Politics of Nomenclature in the Terres Australes

chapter 10|22 pages

‘My Own Slender Remarks'

Global Networks of Slavery and Sociability in Mary Ann Parker's Voyage to New South Wales (1795) 1

chapter 12|26 pages

The Wicked and the Fair

Changing Perceptions of Terra Australis through the Prism of the Batavia Shipwreck (1629)