Josiah Blackmore is the Nancy Clark Smith Professor of the Language and Literature of Portugal at Harvard University. Among his books are Moorings: Portuguese Expansion and the Writing of Africa, Manifest Perdition: Shipwreck Narrative and the Disruption of Empire, and The Songs of António Botto.
“The Inner Sea makes a singular and original contribution by surveying the contours of a maritime literary consciousness, testing both its temporal and expressive limits. Blackmore reads with a rare sensitivity for poetic texts, as he patiently and carefully unfolds the various layers of what it means for Portuguese writers such as Luís de Camões to ‘stand in the middle of the sea.’ The results of Blackmore’s exploration are impressive and convincing.” -- Vincent Barletta, author of Rhythm: Form and Dispossession “In our fruitful age of global studies and the West’s fascination with Africa and India, The Inner Sea could not be more timely. Blackmore offers readers a stunning account of Da Gama’s unprecedented voyages from Portugal to Africa in 1497, reaching India in 1498, and their profound meaning. These journeys for the first time transformed a world divided by the seas into an interconnected one, not only reaching South Africa, but India as well. The Inner Sea is richly documented by many sources that the author has chosen to accompany his dazzling readings of Camões’s extraordinary maritime epic adventure, Os Lusíadas.” -- Marina S. Brownlee, Robert Schirmer Professor of Spanish and Portuguese and Comparative Literature, Princeton University “Blackmore is already well known for his work on maritime topics in Portuguese literature. Tacking slightly from his earlier scholarly books, his beautifully written The Inner Sea focuses on some of the profound cultural consequences of Portuguese dominance on the global ocean during the early modern period. Blackmore documents a process of internalization of the sea in Portuguese daily life that is evident in many kinds of documents of the times, including literary texts. He asserts that ‘ships wield subject-forming power’ and he proceeds to show his reader how the multiple subjectivities formed in the effort to tame the sea flourish in the literary world of Luís Vaz de Camões and others. Blackmore provides excellent English translations for the Portuguese texts he cites, many of which are his own, and the figures that illustrate his book are splendid.” -- Elizabeth B. Davis, The Ohio State University