Your country and preferred language.

Select your country Select language

Denna webbplats använder cookies för att säkerställa att du får den bästa upplevelsen.

Menu
Sökalternativ
Stäng

Välkommen till Sveriges största bokhandel

Här finns så gott som allt som givits ut på den svenska bokmarknaden under de senaste hundra åren.

  • Handla mot faktura och öppet köp i 21 dagar
  • Oavsett vikt och antal artiklar handlar du till enhetsfrakt från samma säljare i samma kundvagn
Carl Peter Thunberg. Career-Building across the Oceans in the Eighteenth Century

Carl Peter Thunberg. Career-Building across the Oceans in the Eighteenth Century

Inbunden bok. Swedish Collegium for Advanced Study. 1 uppl. 2014. 376 sidor.

Mycket gott skick. Skyddsomslag i mycket gott skick. Format 250 x 188 mm

Inrikes enhetsfrakt Sverige: 62 SEK
Betala med Swish Stöd Bokhjälpen

Förlagsfakta

ISBN
9789198194807
Titel
Carl Peter Thunberg
Författare
Skuncke, Marie-Christine
Förlag
eddy.se ab
Utgivningsår
2014
Omfång
376 sidor
Bandtyp
Inbunden
Vikt
1298 g
Språk
English
Baksidestext
The Swedish botanist and physician Carl Peter Thunberg, a pupil of Linnaeus, was the only European who visited and published his observations of Tokugawa Japan in the eighteenth century. On his way to and from Japan, he visited territories in the Dutch colonial empire: the Cape Colony, Batavia (present-day Jakarta), and Ceylon (Sri Lanka). Following his return to Sweden, he made a spectacular career at the University of Uppsala. He published a ground-breaking work on Japanese plants, Flora Japonica (1784), and a travel account that was translated into several languages. In 1787 the Swedish king Gustav Ill, on Thunberg’s initiative, founded a new Botanical Garden and a monumental building for natural history – Linneanum, now the home of the Swedish Collegium for Advanced Study (SCAS) – as a gift to the university.

Marie-Christine Skuncke reconstructs Thunberg’s scientific career by exploring exchanges within the networks which he built in Europe, the Dutch colonies, and Tokugawa Japan. Drawing on a wide range of sources, this book is a study of social practices in natural history, in a global perspective.

Marie-Christine Skuncke, Professor of Literature at Uppsala University and a Former Fellow of SCAS, was born in Paris of a Swedish father and a French-Polish mother. She holds a PhD from the University of Cambridge. Since 1995, she chairs the Uppsala Interdisciplinary Seminar in Eighteenth-Century Studies. She has published extensively on eighteenth-century Sweden in a European perspective, with a particular focus on theatre and opera, the education of Gustav Ill, political rhetoric, and media history. Her research on Thunberg has turned her attention to relations with Asia and Africa.