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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter 1
- Table of Contents 5
- Indian Ocean c. 1700 (Map courtesy of Inox Spatial Data and Services) 7
- Introduction 9
-
Chapter 1. The Republic, Its Stage, and Its East India Company
- Introduction 25
- The Dutch East India Company 30
- The Dutch East India Company: The Merchant and Manufacturer of Information 33
- The Amsterdamsche Schouwburg 50
- Dutch Drama and the Orient 54
-
Chapter 2. When Vondel Looked Eastwards: Joost Van Den Vondel’s Zungchin (1667)
- Introduction 61
- “One’s Company, Two’s a Crowd”: Representation in Zungchin 64
- Historicity in Vondel’s Zungchin 67
- Two Playwrights, One Tale 70
- The Benefits of Extensive Reading: Vondel and the Sources for Zungchin 72
- Batavian Holidays and Information Packages: Martino Martini and the VOC 74
- News Channel Formosa 79
- Discourses, Dispositions, Despotisms: Imagining the Middle Kingdom 85
- Discerning Oriental Dispositions: Tartar Bloodbaths and Chinese Bookishness 89
- Begetting Sinister Children: Benevolent and Oriental Despotisms 95
- Arms or Amiability: To Talk or Terrorize the Chinese into Trade 100
- The Playwright Sorts and Sieves: Motives behind the Scripting of Zungchin 105
- Conclusion 113
-
Chapter 3. Casting Despots in Dutch Drama: The Case of Nadir Shah in Van Steenwyk’s Thamas Koelikan (1745)
- Introduction 117
- The Plot (The Historical and the Literary) 118
- Van Steenwyk, Dryden, and their Sophies 126
- Passage to (Mughal) India: Information Transfer and Its Resultant Discourses 129
- The Mughal Discourse 136
- The Company Discourse of the Dutch Factory in Hoogly (Bengal) 138
- The European Correspondence 146
- The Politics of Representation in Van Steenwyk’s Thamas Koelikan 148
- Conclusion 155
-
Chapter 4: Swimming against the Tide: Onno Zwier Van Haren’s Agon, Sulthan Van Bantam (1769)
- Introduction 159
- Bad Blood over Banten: The English and Dutch Hostilities in Print 163
- Antecedents to Agon’s Anti-Colonial Indictment 169
- Accounts of Travel and Travelling Company Correspondence 173
- Making the Other’s Business One’s Own: Information Gathering and Intelligence Acquisition 177
- Salacious and Sordid Spectacles: Representation of Banten’s Women and Sultan Abdul 181
- Anxieties over Apostasy: The Company and Its Renegades 186
- The Other Side of the Story: Banten’s View of Batavia 193
- Intentions, Influences, and the Inevitable Scholarly Tussles 201
- Van Haren, Fence-sitting, and the Other Side 205
- Closing in on Van Haren’s Intentions 208
- Conclusion 216
- Conclusion 219
- Acknowledgements 227
-
Bibliography
- Archival Sources 229
- Primary Sources 229
- Secondary Sources 237
- Index 255
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter 1
- Table of Contents 5
- Indian Ocean c. 1700 (Map courtesy of Inox Spatial Data and Services) 7
- Introduction 9
-
Chapter 1. The Republic, Its Stage, and Its East India Company
- Introduction 25
- The Dutch East India Company 30
- The Dutch East India Company: The Merchant and Manufacturer of Information 33
- The Amsterdamsche Schouwburg 50
- Dutch Drama and the Orient 54
-
Chapter 2. When Vondel Looked Eastwards: Joost Van Den Vondel’s Zungchin (1667)
- Introduction 61
- “One’s Company, Two’s a Crowd”: Representation in Zungchin 64
- Historicity in Vondel’s Zungchin 67
- Two Playwrights, One Tale 70
- The Benefits of Extensive Reading: Vondel and the Sources for Zungchin 72
- Batavian Holidays and Information Packages: Martino Martini and the VOC 74
- News Channel Formosa 79
- Discourses, Dispositions, Despotisms: Imagining the Middle Kingdom 85
- Discerning Oriental Dispositions: Tartar Bloodbaths and Chinese Bookishness 89
- Begetting Sinister Children: Benevolent and Oriental Despotisms 95
- Arms or Amiability: To Talk or Terrorize the Chinese into Trade 100
- The Playwright Sorts and Sieves: Motives behind the Scripting of Zungchin 105
- Conclusion 113
-
Chapter 3. Casting Despots in Dutch Drama: The Case of Nadir Shah in Van Steenwyk’s Thamas Koelikan (1745)
- Introduction 117
- The Plot (The Historical and the Literary) 118
- Van Steenwyk, Dryden, and their Sophies 126
- Passage to (Mughal) India: Information Transfer and Its Resultant Discourses 129
- The Mughal Discourse 136
- The Company Discourse of the Dutch Factory in Hoogly (Bengal) 138
- The European Correspondence 146
- The Politics of Representation in Van Steenwyk’s Thamas Koelikan 148
- Conclusion 155
-
Chapter 4: Swimming against the Tide: Onno Zwier Van Haren’s Agon, Sulthan Van Bantam (1769)
- Introduction 159
- Bad Blood over Banten: The English and Dutch Hostilities in Print 163
- Antecedents to Agon’s Anti-Colonial Indictment 169
- Accounts of Travel and Travelling Company Correspondence 173
- Making the Other’s Business One’s Own: Information Gathering and Intelligence Acquisition 177
- Salacious and Sordid Spectacles: Representation of Banten’s Women and Sultan Abdul 181
- Anxieties over Apostasy: The Company and Its Renegades 186
- The Other Side of the Story: Banten’s View of Batavia 193
- Intentions, Influences, and the Inevitable Scholarly Tussles 201
- Van Haren, Fence-sitting, and the Other Side 205
- Closing in on Van Haren’s Intentions 208
- Conclusion 216
- Conclusion 219
- Acknowledgements 227
-
Bibliography
- Archival Sources 229
- Primary Sources 229
- Secondary Sources 237
- Index 255