2023
DOI: 10.1177/00732753231191340
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Ottoman plants, nature studies, and the attentiveness of translational labor

Duygu Yıldırım

Abstract: Translations, whether in the form of text, illustration, or interpretive analysis, served knowledge-making in multiple ways. It offered a refuge, severed contexts, and concealed the various workers that created it. Over the course of the seventeenth century, European naturalists in Istanbul, such as Luigi Ferdinando Marsigli (1658–1730), procured illustrations of Ottoman nature as fundamental resources to identify, collect, and compare indigenous plants and newly bred varieties. Despite maintaining an actual m… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...

Citation Types

0
0
0

Publication Types

Select...

Relationship

0
0

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 0 publications
references
References 6 publications
0
0
0
Order By: Relevance

No citations

Set email alert for when this publication receives citations?