
Benjamin Schmidt
Associate Professor: Early Modern Europe; Expansion and Globalism; Early Modern Netherlands and Spain.
schmidtb@u.washington.edu
Education
Ph.D. Harvard University, 1994.
Selected Bibliography
Innocence Abroad: The Dutch Imagination and the New World, 1570-1670 (Cambridge University Press, 2001; paperback ed. 2006).
* Winner, Renaissance Society of America's Phyllis Goodhart Gordan Prize for best book in Renaissance studies (all disciplines), 2002-2003
* Winner, the Holland Society's Hendricks Prize for best book in colonial Dutch studies, 2002-2003.
Making Knowledge in Early Modern Europe: Practices, Objects, and Texts, 1400-1800 (University of Chicago Press, 2007), co-edited with Pamela Smith.
The Discovery of Guiana by Sir Walter Ralegh (edited and introduced; with related documents). Bedford Series in History and Culture, series eds. Natalie Davis, Lynn Hunt, Bonnie Smith (Bedford/St. Martins, 2007).
Going Dutch: The Dutch Presence in America, 1609-2009 (Brill Academic Press [forthcoming, 2008]) (with J. Goodfriend and A. Stott).
"The Dutch Atlantic: Provincialism and Globalism," in Atlantic History: A Critical Appraisal, ed. Jack Greene and Philip Morgan (Oxford, forthcoming).
"Holland in America, or A Brief History of the Assimilation and Resistance, Admiration and Derision, Negligence and Influence of the Dutch in Colonial America and the United States, ca. 1600-2000" (with J. Goodfriend and A. Stott). In Going Dutch: The Dutch Presence in America, 1609-2009 , ed. Goodfriend, Schmidt, and Stott ( Leiden, forthcoming).
"Bounding the Early Modern World: Geography and Globalism in the Early Enlightenment," in The Boundaries of the Netherlands: Ambiguities, Exchanges, and Transgressions, ed. Wayne te Brake, Marybeth Carlson, and Benjamin Kaplan (Leiden, forthcoming).
"Ralegh's Courteous Conquest." In The Discovery of Guiana by Sir Walter Ralegh (Boston and New York, 2007), 1-45.
"Knowledge and its Making in Early Modern Europe" (with Pamela Smith), in Making Knowledge in Early Modern Europe: Practices, Objects, and Texts, 1400-1800 (Chicago, 2007).
"Maps and the Early Modern State: Official Cartography" (with Richard Kagan), in The History of Cartography, vol. 3, "Cartography in the European Renaissance," ed. David Woodward (Chicago, 2007).
"Reading Ralegh's America: Textual Experience and Travel Literature in the Early Modern Atlantic World." In The Atlantic World and Virginia, 1550-1624, ed. Peter Mancall (Chapel Hill, 2007).
"'Imperfect Chaos': Tropical Medicine and Exotic Natural History Circa 1700," in Medicine and Religion in Enlightenment Europe, ed. Andrew Cunningham and Ole Peter Grell (Aldershot, 2007), 145-173.
"Nicolaes Cornelisz Witsen (1641-1717)," in The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, ed. Colin Matthew et al. (Oxford, 2004).
"The Purpose of Pirates, or Assimilating New Worlds in the Renaissance," in The Atlantic World: Studies in Migration, Imagination, and Slavery, ed. Willem Klooster and Alfred L. Padula (Upper Saddle River, NJ, 2004), 160-177
"The World of Early Modern Spain: Empire and its Anxieties in the Golden Age" (with Richard Kagan), in Spain and the Age of Exploration, 1492-1819, ed. Chiyo Ishikawa (Seattle and London, 2004), 48-90
"Mapping an Exotic World: The Global Project of Geography, circa 1700," in The Global Eighteenth Century, ed. Felicity Nussbaum (Baltimore and London, 2003), 19-37.
"American Natural." Review essay on early modern science and natural history occasioned by Joyce E. Chaplin, Subject Matter: Technology, the Body, and Science on the Anglo-American Frontier, 1500-1676 (Cambridge, MA, 2001). In Reviews in American History, vol. 30 (Dec., 2002), 530-541.
"Inventing Exoticism: The Project of Dutch Geography and the Marketing of the World, circa 1700," in Merchants and Marvels: Commerce, Science and Art in Early Modern Europe, ed. Paula Findlen and Pamela H. Smith (London, 2002), 347-370.
"The Hope of the Netherlands: Menasseh ben Israel and the Dutch Idea of America," in The Jews and the Expansion of Europe to the West, 1450 to 1800, ed. Paolo Bernardini and Norman Fiering, European Expansion And Global Interaction, vol. 2 (Oxford and New York, 2001), 86-107.
"Going Dutch." Review essay on colonial New York and Atlantic World history, occasioned by Donna Merwick, Death of a Notary: Conquest and Change in Colonial New York (Ithaca, NY, 1999). In Reviews in American History, vol. 28 (June, 2000), 187-195.
"Exotic Allies: The Dutch-Chilean Encounter and the (Failed) Conquest of America," The Renaissance Quarterly, vol. 52, no.2 (Summer, 1999), 440-473.
"Space, Time, Travel: Hugo de Groot [Grotius], Johannes de Laet, and the 'Advancement' of Geographic Learning," Lias: The Journal of Early Modern History of Ideas, vol. 25 (1998), 177-199.
"American Allies: The Dutch Encounter with the New World, 1492-1650." Working Papers of the International Seminar on the History of the Atlantic World, 3rd ser., no. 32 (1998), 1-30
"Mapping an Empire: Cartographic and Colonial Rivalry in Seventeenth-Century Dutch and English North America," William and Mary Quarterly, 3d ser., vol. 54 (July, 1997), 549-578.
"The Past in a Foreign Country: Patriotic History and Republican Geography in the Netherlands, ca. 1600-1648." In Presenting the Past: History, Art, Language, Literature, ed. J. Fenoulhet and L. Gilbert, Series Crossways, vol. 3 (London, 1996), 28-38.
"Girolamo Benzoni's Historia del mondo nuovo (Venice, 1565) and Its Translations." In I Found it at the JCB: Scholars and Sources, ed. Norman Fiering (Providence, RI, 1996).
"Tyranny Abroad: The Dutch Revolt and the Invention of America." De Zeventiende Eeuw: Cultuur in de Nederlanden in Interdisciplinair Perspectief, vol. 11, no. 2 (1995), 161-174.
"'O Fortunate Land!': Karel van Mander, a West Indies Landscape, and the Dutch Discovery of the New World." Nieuwe West-Indische Gids, Publications of the Royal Dutch Academy of Arts and Sciences, vol. 69, nos. 1 & 2 (1995), 5-44.
Research in Progress
Inventing Exoticism: The Project of Globalism Circa 1700
Book-length study of the culture and politics of exoticism, globalism, and colonial expansion in late Baroque and early Enlightenment Europe
Exoticisms
Museum exhibition on Europe's engagements with exoticism, as expressed in paintings, graphic materials, and the decorative arts; organized in collaboration with the Seattle Art Museum.
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