Summary
European governments often rely on social media to manage their international relations. This is what scholars of international relations have called Public Diplomacy (PD): the effort of diplomatic actors to influence foreign affairs by reaching out to international audiences through actor-to-public interaction. Rather than being a modern invention, historians such as Helmer Helmers and William T. Rossiter have demonstrated that in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries printed media were already widely used for PD. Knowledge of this tradition helps to increase historical awareness about ideas and practices of diplomatic communication and collaboration prior to the foundation of the European Union. However, regularly overlooked in scholarship on the early modern history of PD and diplomacy in general is the important role that the performing arts—much like social media today—played in managing foreign affairs. My research project aims to redress the balance and expand knowledge about the diplomatic function and reception of the early modern performing arts within the context of the state journeys that the English and French royal crown made into the Low Countries between 1577 and 1642. Never been studied in depth before, the theatrical entertainments given for the voyages, including tableaux vivants, triumphal processions, and mock naval battles, constitute an excellent example of early modern PD. I will produce the first book-length student to analyse how the theatrical entertainments served as both lubricants in negotiations between representatives of the Low Countries, England, and France, and as tools for promoting collaboration between those countries to a European audience of diplomats, nobles, and commoners. By bringing together the fields of early modern diplomacy and the performing arts, my monograph boasts a genuinely interdisciplinary approach to the state journeys that is essential to understanding the historical development of modern PD.
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More information & hyperlinks
Web resources: | https://cordis.europa.eu/project/id/101029762 |
Start date: | 01-09-2021 |
End date: | 31-08-2023 |
Total budget - Public funding: | 175 572,48 Euro - 175 572,00 Euro |
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Original description
European governments often rely on social media to manage their international relations. This is what scholars of international relations have called Public Diplomacy (PD): the effort of diplomatic actors to influence foreign affairs by reaching out to international audiences through actor-to-public interaction. Rather than being a modern invention, historians such as Helmer Helmers and William T. Rossiter have demonstrated that in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries printed media were already widely used for PD. Knowledge of this tradition helps to increase historical awareness about ideas and practices of diplomatic communication and collaboration prior to the foundation of the European Union. However, regularly overlooked in scholarship on the early modern history of PD and diplomacy in general is the important role that the performing arts—much like social media today—played in managing foreign affairs. My research project aims to redress the balance and expand knowledge about the diplomatic function and reception of the early modern performing arts within the context of the state journeys that the English and French royal crown made into the Low Countries between 1577 and 1642. Never been studied in depth before, the theatrical entertainments given for the voyages, including tableaux vivants, triumphal processions, and mock naval battles, constitute an excellent example of early modern PD. I will produce the first book-length student to analyse how the theatrical entertainments served as both lubricants in negotiations between representatives of the Low Countries, England, and France, and as tools for promoting collaboration between those countries to a European audience of diplomats, nobles, and commoners. By bringing together the fields of early modern diplomacy and the performing arts, my monograph boasts a genuinely interdisciplinary approach to the state journeys that is essential to understanding the historical development of modern PD.Status
CLOSEDCall topic
MSCA-IF-2020Update Date
28-04-2024
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